I’m excited to announce that my new oral probiotic is now available for purchase on Fygg.com. This probiotic is a white-label of the Bristle probiotic, which I chose because it’s already perfect. Why create a new one when the best solution is already out there?
An easy and effective way to improve your oral microbiome and health is by taking a probiotic specifically formulated for the mouth. These probiotics increase the levels of good bacteria while reducing harmful bacteria that cause gum disease, cavities, and bad breath.
Why This Probiotic?
After extensive research, and in partnership with oral microbiome experts, Bristle identified the most clinically effective probiotic strains for oral health.
Bristle’s oral probiotic rebalances the oral microbiome with six scientifically proven strains:
– **Streptococcus salivarius M18:** Reduces gum inflammation and bad breath
– **Streptococcus salivarius K12:** Supports gum and throat health, reduces bad breath
– **Lactobacillus reuteri:** Improves immunity, kills bad breath and gum inflammation-causing bacteria
– **Lactobacillus salivarius:** Fights tooth decay-causing bacteria and reduces bad breath
– **Lactobacillus plantarum:** Inhibits gum inflammation-causing species
– **Bifidobacterium lactis:** Improves gum health, fights gum inflammation and bad breath
This oral probiotic also includes xylitol, which helps fight cavity-causing bacteria. It’s made with all-natural, clean ingredients—dairy-free, gluten-free, and nut-free with no GMOs, artificial colors, flavors, preservatives, or sweeteners.
**Recommended Use:**
– **1x/day:** General oral health maintenance
– **2x/day:** Combatting active issues like gum disease, cavities, and bad breath
This probiotic is designed to help you achieve optimal oral health by promoting a balanced microbiome. Show your oral microbiome some love and experience the benefits today.
**Get it now on Fygg.com**. And, as always, I’d love to know what you think – try it, let me know how you like it. Or, hit reply with any oral probiotic-related questions.
Thanks for reading,
Dr. Mark Burhenne
P.S. In the next newsletter, I’ll give you details on how to take an oral probiotic (there is a wrong and right way to take them)!