# Effects of brushing with caffeinated toothpaste on neurocognitive function of the central nervous system: a randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial

**Authors:** Kiarash Zare, Mahva Talaei, Amir Hesam Pahlevani, Fahimeh Rezazadeh, Kiana Zare, Masumeh Akbaryari, Mohammad Mehdi Naghizadeh, Mojtaba Heydari, Mohsen Goharinia

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/froh.2025.1470531 · Frontiers in Oral Health · 2025-05-15

## TL;DR

Brushing with caffeinated toothpaste improves cognitive and motor functions similarly to drinking caffeine.

## Contribution

Shows that brushing with caffeinated toothpaste can enhance neurocognitive performance like oral caffeine.

## Key findings

- Caffeinated toothpaste improved selective attention, processing speed, memory, and hand-eye coordination.
- Toothpaste was as effective as oral caffeine in enhancing cognitive and motor functions.
- Longer brushing duration showed trends of higher improvement but not statistically significant.

## Abstract

This randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial aimed to evaluate the effect of brushing with caffeinated toothpaste on neurocognitive function of the central nervous system.

Eighty healthy individuals were randomly assigned to four groups: oral caffeine capsules (100 mg caffeine) as the control, brushing with caffeinated toothpaste (100 mg caffeine) for 2, 3, and 4 min. Cognitive and motor responses were assessed using selective processing speed assessment (Stroop test), short-term memory test, selective attention capacity assessment, and hand-eye coordination test before and after intervention at 10, 30, and 60 min intervals.

Brushing with caffeinated toothpaste was as effective as oral caffeine intake in improving selective attention capacity, selective processing speed, short-term memory, and hand-eye coordination. Despite the higher improvement in the longest duration brushing group in most of the outcomes, the difference did not reach the statistical significance among study groups.

Brushing with caffeinated toothpaste appears to be as effective as oral intake of caffeine in enhance cognitive and motor functions.

https://irct.behdasht.gov.ir/trial/71213, identifier (IRCT20230318057752N2).

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** caffeine (PubChem CID 2519)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** caffeinated (-), caffeine (MESH:D002110)

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12119480/full.md

## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12119480/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12119480