But it's got other uses. It can save you money, make you seem like a better roommate than you are, or rescue your TLC and Alanis Morissette CDs. Read on for some unusual uses of toothpaste. And if you've got a use for toothpaste that I didn't mention here, post it in the comments.
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Signing UpStep 1: Spackle those drywall holes
10:46. I'm wishing I had studied "Highlights for Children" more diligently while I waited to see my dentist. What's wrong with this picture?
Ohhhhhhh... there are a series of holes in the walls ranging in size from very tiny to small. Stupid picture frames, calendar nail, and curtain rods. Why didn't I realize that I would have to move out eventually and fill all of these holes? It's already 10:48?!
What to do what to do what to do... spackle. I need something spackly. Something white and pastey and... That's it! Toothpaste to the rescue. A quick dab here, a gentle smoosh there, and voilá! Handled.
11:15. Full deposit returned in exchange for my minty-fresh apartment. Cashier's check, you and I are going to the bank before the toothpaste dries.














































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Audrey Kunin, MD, seems to know her business.
So make sure to wipe the toothpaste off well. Same applies to mouthwash...
Sodium lauryl sulfate is the villain: it's a foaming agent that, as best I can tell, gives you the impression you're doing an awesome job even if you're not. Maybe it helps get the Good Stuff into more places but I could do without the searing mouth pain. So if you have skin reaction, check the ingredients.
And as a fix, lysine, a commonly available supplement, is very good at clearing them up.
gold and silver especially..:)
seems to work well no more fogging
IN WORKS!!
I cannot believe you brush your teeth and pee at the same time; You're ridiculous, but awesome.
Like chlorine chemicals... or fluorine.
Fortunately, toothpaste doesn't have any fluoride in it.
Oh wait. Yes it does.
It does often have other antibacterials in it, and they can offset the fluoride, but on balance I cannot recommend toothpaste.
(Actually toothpaste reliably breaks be out.)
On the other hand every acme product I've used has cause me to have more acme and break out even more, trust me tooth paste is your safest cheapest bet.
:D
But it's not *safe*, it doesn't have any clinical trials behind it, and fluoride is actually known to cause breakouts.
For me, this isn't even a theoretical risk, it really does cause big problems.
You must be referring to chloracne which is a sign of acute poisoning by halogenated aromatic compounds. It is fantastically rate with literally just a few hundred cases over the last century. It requires that the compounds be ingested.
In any case, toothpaste has none of those compounds and the sodium fluoride (NaFl) used in most toothpaste is just the fluorine version of common table salt (NaCl). It's harmless unless ingested in large amounts in a very short time (just like table salt.) There are parts of the world were well water contains hundreds of times as numb sodium fluoride as you get brushing your teeth.
You can't say, "OMG certain halogenated aromatic compounds cause a rare form of acne so everything in the world with halogens in them must cause acne!" Chemistry, especially biochemistry doesn't work that way.
Google: "perioral dermatitis"
I suppose you could get periorial dematitis from developing an allergy to toothpaste or from smearing ungodly amounts of it on your face but you could probably cause the same problem by smearing a paste containing table salt on your face as well.
There are many regions in the world where the well water has very, very high levels of sodium fluoride and other similar compounds. People in those areas suffer no noticeable ill effects even though their fluoride exposure is thousands of times higher than normal.
They do, however, have great teeth and bones which is were the idea of adding similar fluoride compounds to toothpaste and water came from.
Paranoia is about fluoride is one of those strange little conspiracy ideas that floats around and it has since the 50s when the John Birch society declared that fluoridation of water supplies was a communist plot. Somehow the idea took hold and despite decades of research and real world experience, a lot of people still think it has some validity. I think it's a case of, "where there's smoke there's fire," but substitute "ill informed chatter" for smoke. If enough people talk about the existence of possible threat some people will assume that there must be a threat driving the chatter.
However, there is no reason to suspect that it is the fluoride compounds specifically that cause your problem. It could just a well be any of the other dozen or so components of the toothpaste. There is nothing about those specific fluoride compounds that associate them with skin disorders.
You could just be very sensitive to having something that traps moisture against your face. It's important not to go off half-cocked about such things.
I've personally found that the toothpastes I've used have all broken me out.
So for multiple reasons, I recommend against anyone using this product like this.