Canker Sore Prevention

Below is the reference and abstract for a study on the use of Listerine mouthwash on reducing the incidence and severity of canker sore outbreaks. The bottom line is this: It works. Rinse twice daily with the original (yellow colored) Listerine mouth wash to reduce canker sore outbreaks. We at Verve have no connection to Listerine, nor have we carried out a separate study, but from our personal experience, it does work, (even rinsing once a day!)

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Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol. 1991 Oct;72(4):425-9.

Effect of an antimicrobial mouthrinse on recurrent aphthous ulcerations.

Meiller TF, Kutcher MJ, Overholser CD, Niehaus C, DePaola LG, Siegel MA.

Source

Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, Dental School, University of Maryland.

Abstract

Recurrent aphthous ulceration (RAU) or canker sores remains a clinical problem for many patients. Efforts in prevention and/or treatment with prescription and nonprescription formulations have to date resulted in minimal success at best. A 6-month double-blind clinical study of 96 adults compared a commercially available antimicrobial mouthrinse (Listerine Antiseptic [LA], Warner-Lambert Co., Morris Plains, N.J.) and a hydroalcoholic control to evaluate the effects of vigorous twice-daily rinsing on the incidence, duration, and severity of RAU canker sores in persons prone to this disorder. LA rinse and the hydroalcoholic rinse resulted in a statistically significant reduction in the incidence of canker sores RAU occurrences from baseline. The duration of lesions and the severity of pain in subjects with canker sore ulcers during the treatment period were also significantly reduced in the LA rinse group of patients when compared with baseline. The hydroalcoholic rinse did not show a significant effect versus baseline for either severity or duration of the lesions. Rinsing therefore can be of clinical value in reducing the occurrence of canker sores in RAU susceptible patients, and LA rinse can be of significant additional value in decreasing the duration and severity of canker sores.