Plaque-controlling liquid tooth cleaning agent

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Dentifrices

Reexamination Certificate

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Reexamination Certificate

active

06682719

ABSTRACT:

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to liquid tooth cleaning preparations containing polishes, humectants, tartar-inhibiting antimicrobial agents and water which are substantially transparent or clear and which show favorable rheological behavior for dispensing from small flexible plastic bottles.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Liquid tooth cleaning preparations which can be dispensed under light pressure from small flexible plastic bottles are already known, for example from WO 94/01080 A1. These products are white or opaque in appearance. DE 2033678 B2 describes toothpastes which contain a silica polish and a humectant combination containing polyethylene glycols with molecular weights in the range from 800 to 2,000. These products are clear or transparent in appearance. EP 0 754 027 B2 describes liquid tooth cleaning preparations containing a silica polish and a humectant combination of sorbitol and a low molecular weight polyethylene glycol.
The problem addressed by the present invention was to provide water-based liquid tooth cleaning gels having high transparency and a content of antimicrobial agents for controlling tartar. It has been found that both the liquid consistency and high transparency can be achieved if the products contain less than 50% by weight of sorbitol and 0.1 to 5% by weight of a polyethylene glycol with an average molecular weight of 800 to 10,000 and 0.1 to 1% by weight of an antimicrobial agent selected from triclosan, hexetidine and mixtures thereof.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, the present invention relates to a water-based liquid tooth cleaning gel with a viscosity below 50 Pa·s (20° C.), characterized by a content of
 10 to 20% by weight of
a silica polish,
 40 to 60% by weight of
a humectant combination consisting of less than
50% by weight of sorbitol (based on the gel as a
whole), less than 10% by weight of glycerol
and 1 to 5% by weight of polyethylene glycol
with an average molecular weight of 800 to
10,000,
0.1 to 1% by weight of
an antimicrobial agent selected from triclosan,
hexetidine and mixtures thereof,
  1 to 10% by weight of
other toothpaste ingredients and
 25 to 35% by weight of
water.
Liquid in the context of the present invention means a viscosity of less than 50 Pa·s (as measured at 20° C. with a Brookfield RVF rotational viscosimeter, spindle ¾ at 4 r.p.m. corresponding to a shear rate D of 4 S
−1
) which provides for dispensing from a small flexible bottle by light pressure and ensures that the gel sinks slowly into the bristles of the toothbrush.
The transparency of the tooth cleaning gel should be at least so high that text with a letter height of ca. 4 mm and a letter width of 3 mm is still easy to read through a ca. 1 cm thick layer of the tooth gel (for example in a clear glass cell with an edge length of 1×1×4 cm). The viscosity and transparency according to the invention are achieved through the choice and quantity of the polishing components, thickeners and humectants used.
Suitable silica polishing components are any silica gels, silica hydrogels and precipitated silicas known as polishes. Silica gels are obtained by reacting sodium silicate solutions with strong aqueous mineral acids to form a hydrosol, ageing to form the hydrogel, washing and drying. If drying is carried out under moderate conditions to a water content of 15 to 35% by weight, the so-called silica hydrogels known, for example, from U.S. Pat. No. 4,153,680 are obtained.
Drying to water contents below 15% by weight results in irreversible shrinkage of the previously loose structure of the hydrogel to the dense structure of the so-called xerogel. Silica xerogels are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 3,538,230.
A second particularly suitable group of silica polishing agents are the precipitated silicas. Precipitated silicas are obtained by precipitation of silica from dilute alkali metal silicate solutions by addition of strong acids under conditions which preclude aggregation to the sol and gel. Suitable processes for the production of precipitated silicas are described, for example, in DE-OS 25 22 486 and in DE-OS 31 14 493. A particularly suitable precipitated silica is that produced in accordance with DE-OS 31 14 493 which has a BET surface of 15 to 110 m
2
/g, a particle size of 0.5 to 20 &mgr;m (at least 80% by weight of the primary particles should be below 5 &mgr;m in size) and a viscosity in the form of a 30% glycerol/water (1:1) dispersion of 30 to 60 Pa·s (20° C.) and which is used in a quantity of 10 to 20% by weight, based on the tooth gel. In addition, particularly suitable precipitated silicas of this type have rounded corners and edges and are commercially obtainable under the name of Sident®12 DS (DEGUSSA). Another suitable silica is Zeodent 113 (Huber Corp.) with a BET surface of 150 to 250 m
2
/g.
Other precipitated silicas of this type are Sident 8 (DEGUSSA) and Sorbosil AC 39 (Crosfield Chemicals). These silicas are distinguished by a weaker thickening effect and a slightly larger mean particle size of 8 to 14 &mgr;m for a specific BET surface of 40 to 75 m
2
/g and are particularly suitable for liquid tooth gels according to the present invention.
Other polishes, particularly those with a refractive index differing from 1.45 &mgr;m by more than 0.1, are preferably not present at all or are present at most in quantities of less than 2% by weight. Such polishes are, for example, pumice, zirconium silicate or gamma-aluminium oxide.
Of crucial importance to the rheology and transparency of the liquid tooth cleaning gels according to the invention is the composition of the liquid carrier phase of water and humectants. The total quantity of 40 to 60% by weight of the humectant combination is based on the tooth cleaning gel as a whole and consists essentially of sorbitol and polyethylene glycol. However, the quantity of sorbitol should be below 50% by weight. Glycerol may optionally be present in quantities of less than 10% by weight. Suitable polyethylene glycols are the relatively high molecular weight types with average molecular weights of 800 to 10,000 and preferably in the range from 1,000 to 40,000. The water content of the tooth gels according to the invention is in the range from 25 to 35% by weight and is the sum of the quantities of water introduced by the raw materials, such as 70% sorbitol or 86% glycerol for example, and the quantities separately added. The quantities of sorbitol and glycerol mentioned are based on water-free active substances.
Particularly suitable antimicrobial agents for inhibiting the formation of plaque are 2,2,4′-trichloro-2′-hydroxydiphenylether (triclosan) and 1,3-bis-(2-ethylhexyl)-5-mthyl-5-aminohexahydropyrimidine (hexetidine) and mixtures of these antimicrobial components. The hexetidine may also be present in the form of a water-soluble salt, for example the benzoate, terephthalate or salicylate. These selected antimicrobial agents can be incorporated particularly clearly and stably in the tooth gels according to the invention.
In addition to the compulsory components mentioned, the tooth cleaning gels according to the invention may contain 1 to 10% by weight of other toothpaste ingredients which, in type and quantity, do not adversely affect transparency. Such ingredients are, for example, binders, surfactants, flavors and sweeteners, scale inhibitors, fluorine compounds, vitamins, panthenol and other active substances.
Suitable binders are, for example, natural and/or synthetic water-soluble polymers, such as alginates, carrageenates, tragacanth, starch and starch ethers, cellulose ethers such as, for example, carboxymethyl cellulose (Na salt), hydroxyethyl cellulose, methyl hydroxypropyl cellulose, guar, acacia gum, agar agar, xanthan gum, succinoglycan gum, locust bean gum, pectins, water-soluble carboxyvinyl polymers (for example Carbopol® types), polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, polyethylene glycols, more particularly those with molecular weights of 1,500 to 1,000,000.
Particularly

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