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Imagine a toothbrush that gives you a personal report card every day. Instead of wondering whether you brushed long enough or missed a spot, the BrushO AI-Powered Toothbrush delivers daily, weekly, and monthly reports straight to your app. With smart sensors, AI-driven tracking, and a privacy-first design, BrushO transforms brushing into a guided health routine, helping families and individuals maintain healthier teeth and gums.

Most people assume that brushing twice a day is enough. But studies show:
70% of users don’t brush for the full two minutes.
One-third of tooth surfaces are often missed.
Over-brushing can damage enamel and gums.
A brushing report solves this problem by giving clear feedback: how long you brushed, which areas you missed, and how your oral health habits change over time.
The BrushO Toothbrush uses sensors and AI to analyze every brushing session:
Daily Reports → Track your performance each day with coverage and pressure insights.
Weekly Reports → See patterns, like whether weekends are your weak spots.
Monthly Reports → Get a big-picture view of your oral health consistency.
Instead of vague reminders, you get real data to improve your brushing routine.
BrushO is more than a smart toothbrush—it’s an oral health companion:
Real-Time Feedback → Alerts if you brush too hard or miss an area.
App Integration → Reports are stored securely, fully under user control.
Replaceable Brush Head Design → Ensures hygienic, effective cleaning without extra waste.
Privacy-First → Brushing data is decentralized, meaning it belongs to you—not stored on vulnerable central servers.
Parents can check if kids really brushed for two minutes.
Teens with braces can see if brackets and wires are cleaned properly.
Adults can stay motivated with streaks and progress scores.
Seniors can ensure they brush gently enough to protect their gums.
Everyone in the household gets a clear, personalized report that turns brushing into a habit you can trust.
An AI toothbrush with personalized reports changes the way we think about oral care. Instead of brushing blindly, BrushO users get daily, weekly, and monthly insights that help prevent cavities, protect gums, and build lifelong healthy habits.
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Approximately 85% of people will need their wisdom teeth removed at some point in their lives. However, not all third molars require extraction.

Dentin hypersensitivity affects approximately 1 in 3 adults worldwide, causing sharp, transient pain when teeth are exposed to cold, hot, sweet, or acidic stimuli. This common condition occurs when the protective enamel layer wears thin or gum tissue recedes, exposing the underlying dentin and its microscopic tubules that lead directly to the tooth's nerve center.

Despite its fearsome reputation, modern root canal therapy is a virtually painless procedure that saves over 15 million teeth each year in the United States alone. With advances in rotary instrumentation, digital imaging, and local anesthesia, the success rate of root canal treatment now exceeds 95%.

Orthodontic treatment has evolved dramatically beyond traditional metal braces. Today's options include clear aligners, lingual braces, and accelerated orthodontic techniques that can shorten treatment time by up to 50%.

Periodontal disease affects nearly 50% of adults over the age of 30 in the United States, yet its early stage — gingivitis — is completely reversible with proper oral hygiene. Left untreated, gum disease progresses silently, destroying the supporting structures of teeth and emerging as the leading cause of tooth loss among adults worldwide.

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) affects an estimated 1 billion adults worldwide aged 30–69, with moderate to severe disease (apnea-hypopnea index, AHI ≥ 15) present in approximately 425 million (Benjafield et al., 2019). In the United States, prevalence estimates range from 9–38% of adults, with 80–90

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Xerostomia — the subjective sensation of dry mouth — affects an estimated 20–30% of the adult population, with prevalence rising sharply with age. Among individuals over 65, prevalence exceeds 40%, driven largely by polypharmacy and systemic disease (Thomson et al., 2023). While often dismissed as a

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