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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
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05/14/22 | Amazon | $3.77 |
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05/09/22 | Amazon | $3.75 frontpage |
10 |
03/04/22 | Amazon | $3.91 |
1 |
02/18/22 | Amazon | $4.02 |
3 |
02/17/22 | Amazon | $3.74 |
3 |
02/16/22 | Amazon | $3.75 frontpage |
9 |
01/19/22 | Amazon | $3.64 |
3 |
01/18/22 | Amazon | $3.64 popular |
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12/09/21 | Amazon | $3.60 frontpage |
37 |
11/24/21 | Amazon | $3.90 |
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11/12/21 | Amazon | $3.60 frontpage |
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05/04/21 | Amazon | $3.60 frontpage |
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04/07/21 | Amazon | $3.75 frontpage |
16 |
01/23/21 | Amazon | 3 for $10.30 frontpage |
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10/21/20 | Amazon | $3.45 |
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Amazon | $7.33 |
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Studies show non-alcohol Listerine is comparable in effect to the alcohol version without drying out the mouth, which is itself a risk factor for developing cavities.
There are some concerns about alcohol's carcinogenic effect possibly being a risk factor in oral cancers, but there is not enough evidence to strongly declare this.
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Studies show non-alcohol Listerine is comparable in effect to the alcohol version without drying out the mouth, which is itself a risk factor for developing cavities.
There are some concerns about alcohol's carcinogenic effect possibly being a risk factor in oral cancers, but there is not enough evidence to strongly declare this.
Studies show non-alcohol Listerine is comparable in effect to the alcohol version without drying out the mouth, which is itself a risk factor for developing cavities.
There are some concerns about alcohol's carcinogenic effect possibly being a risk factor in oral cancers, but there is not enough evidence to strongly declare this.
As the message states that you quoted, there is no point in using an alcohol mouthwash, so I think you are missing either the point or your target audience replying to me instead of just leaving a comment.
Just carrying your logic a little further, it's like saying if you are worried about chewing tobacco causing cancer just chew it less often. Technically I suppose that's true, but it still is bad advice.
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There's no way you know what the cause of their bad breath is. It could be GERD, but even more likely is poor oral hygiene. You are also wrong in that Listerine is literally marketed to assist in freshening breath aside from the anti-gingivitis claims.
100% not true. Source, I'm a doctor.
MD