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As technology advances, toothbrushes have evolved from simple tools to sophisticated smart devices. The future of toothbrush technology is transforming how we care for our oral health with AI-powered features, real-time feedback, and personalized modes that guide users to better brushing habits. Smart toothbrushes are not only designed to clean teeth but to offer insights, track progress, and integrate seamlessly with other health devices. This article dives into the future of smart toothbrushes, their key features, and how they’ll continue to improve oral hygiene for years to come.

BrushO is an AI-powered smart toothbrush designed to improve oral health through real-time feedback, full-mouth coverage tracking, and personalized brushing guidance. With features like pressure monitoring, habit analytics, and a Web3-enabled Brush & Earn rewards system, BrushO helps users turn daily brushing into a structured, data-driven health habit.
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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

Early childhood caries (ECC) is the most common chronic disease of childhood — five times more prevalent than asthma and seven times more common than hay fever, according to the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry. Yet it is almost entirely preventable. Despite decades of public health education

For over a century, dentistry approached oral microorganisms with a single strategy: elimination. From Lister's carbolic acid spray in the 1860s to modern chlorhexidine mouthwashes, the goal was a sterile mouth. But the oral cavity is not sterile — it is a complex ecosystem housing over 700 bacteria

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

In 1952, Swedish orthopedic surgeon Per-Ingvar Brånemark made a serendipitous observation that would transform restorative dentistry. While studying bone healing in rabbit tibiae using titanium optical chambers, he found the chambers could not be removed — bone had grown into direct, rigid contact w