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Sonicare Elite-2 Replacement Brush Head (2 Brush Heads) | (by Sonicare)
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- Brand: Sonicare
/ (1 Item)
- Customer Rating:
4.0 out of 5.0 - (12 Customer Reviews) - Sales Rank: 14 | |
- 2 Elite replacement brush heads
- Compatible only with Sonicare Elite Series handles
- Tapered, extra-soft contoured bristles
- Slim angled neck reaches hard-to-clean areas
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Review from: Amazon.com Review
| For optimum cleaning performance, electric toothbrush heads should be replaced every six months. This set of two replacement brush heads fits Elite series Sonicare handles. Each head features a slim, angled neck and tapered brush with contour-fit, extra-soft bristles for gentle yet deep cleaning. --Ann Bieri
| Comments by readers / customers |
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If kissing is Important...
(Rating: 5 of 5)
( 2005-05-28 )
0
of 0 customer found this comment helpful |
As I teach in my sexual mastery seminars and dvds "NEW SEX NOW" and "GODDESS WORSHIP", there is no such thing as "too much kissing." Women can never get enough of it, and men who desire true intimacy with women will also enjoy it and share the experience as often as possible with a woman they are in relationship with. And there is no comparable feeling of CLEAN TEETH than you get with the Sonicare Elite. Get a couple extra of these brush heads so that you can replace your old one when it get's dull, so that you will always have the cleanest and freshest feeling mouth and teeth for maximum kissing pleasure.
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Sonicare More Effective Than Oral B in NWU Study
(Rating: 5 of 5)
( 2005-02-19 )
7
of 7 people found this comment helpful | My best friend has been raving about his Sonicare Elite for over a year now-- encouraging me to try it. I did a little research and saw that OralB had a similar product and wondered which had a better product-- Sonicare or Oral B. My friend finally convinced me that the Sonicare product is superior, and then I read a review on Amazon from a hygenist who said that she went to a continuing education seminar and learned that Oral B was found to be superior...
At that point, I decided to do my own research... Don't believe everything you read on here...or anywhere else, for that matter, without questioning it. ;-)
Northwestern University did a study over a 6 month period. Patients with the Sonicare did much better, but don't take my word for it. Read the study results for yourself on the National Institute of Health web site: [...] For the lazy: "Overall, this study demonstrates that long-term use of these two electric toothbrushes improves periodontal health in adult periodontitis patients, and that the Sonicare brush is superior to the Braun [Oral B] brush in reducing gingival inflammation and probing depth. Moreover, 6 months' use of Sonicare led to actual improvement in probing attachment levels of periodontal pockets."
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Good battery but poor quality toothbrush heads
(Rating: 3 of 5)
( 2004-12-31 )
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of 7 people found this comment helpful | I have owned the Elite Pro for 1 year and the instructions recommended changing toothbrush heads once every six months. I am now going on my 5th toothbrush head because 2 of the 4 were broken within 2 weeks of use. Basically, I noticed they just were not vibrating like when they were new. The same problem occurred on 2 of the heads. One of the metal strips responsible for producing the vibration broke loose and basically reduced its vibrating power by 50%. It is just poor quality control when the toothbrush has more power than the toothbrush head can handle. On the upside, it works great when it works, and the battery lasts 2 weeks using it twice a day, so no need to pack the relatively small recharger on vacation.
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Two, count 'em
(Rating: 5 of 5)
( 2004-12-27 )
2
of 2 people found this comment helpful | You get two, which could last up to a year. Not bad, the price is right, I've seen these at membership stores for $17.00. You'll need them.
For extra cleaning, dip your loaded toothbrush into a cup of baking soda, it's a gentle abrasive and aids in bringing the teeth up. Sure makes the teeth feel clean.
If you have a 50 year mouth (like mine) and have taken coffee and tea for many moons, a professional whitening may be in order but I'm not laying out a grand for the procedure. I'm into the hygeine aspect of sonic care, and sonic care really does take care of teeth and gums. Gums are often over brushed and wear down or neglected altogether, so remember...Sonic care for health, and looks. But there is a point in life when you either accept the aging and yellow hue or shell out some cash for a cosmetic cleaning procedure.
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