The Research

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1. ..., ... Remineralization Agents: Future Research Needs; Featherstone JD, Fontana M, Wolff M. Novel Anticaries and Remineralization Agents: Future Research Needs. J Dent Res. 2018;97(2):125–127. doi:10.1177/0022034517746371 (…. This report outlines most of what Breathific Dental Probiotics are capable of doing.)

2. Retrospective Review of Oral Probiotic Therapy; Mark L Cannon, Ashlee Vorachek, Catherine Le, Kevin White Journal of Clinical Pediatric Dentistry 2019, 43 (6): 367-371 — This report shows that dental probiotics had a clincially significant effect...

3. A pilot study to assess oral colonization and pH buffering by the probiotic Streptococcus dentisani under different dosing regimes — This report states that repeated doses of 5- minute time-release probiotic gels managed to increase the growth of dental probiotics to some extent.

4. Recovery of Viable Bacteria from Probiotic Products that Target Oral Health — web page — basically states that probiotic organisms must somehow be retained in the mouth and that freeze-dried organisms need to be protected from immunoglobulins

5. Probiotics ... A Novel Therapeutic Strategy? — web page

6. The Use of Probiotic Strains ...: A Systematic Review — web page

7. Probiotics for Oral Health: Myth or Reality? — PDF — California Dental Association Journal states that oral health probiotics show promise

8. Probiotics and the Reduction of ... Risk — PDF

9. Probiotics: Contributions to Oral and Dental Health — PDF

10. Probiotics ...: A Current Update — PDF

11. Probiotics for ... the Oral Environment — web page

12. The Role of Streptococcus salivarius as a Modulator of Homeostasis in the Oral Cavity — PDF

13. Developing Oral Probiotics from Streptococcus salivarius — PDF

14. University of Florida News — Streptococcus A12 — web page

15. Porphyromonas gingivalis may be involved with... — web page

16. Porphyromonas gingivalis and... — web page

17. The Keystone Pathogen Hypothesis — web page

18. Several oral lactobacilli, L. acidophilus, L. paracasei, L. brevis and L. fermentum, also possess the fructose pathway — web page

19. Oral bacteria: How many? How fast?

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