Title of Invention

"TOOTH WHITENING COMPOSITION"

Abstract Stain-removing oral compositions, such as gum compositions are herein provided. The compositions include an orally acceptable carrier and a stain-removing anionic surfactant. The surfactant includes a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality. The fatty acid salt may be a salt of ricinoleic acid, and may be combined with a chelating agent and/or an abrasive. The chelating agent may be a polyphosphate and the abrasive may be a silica abrasive.
Full Text The present invention is generally directed to oral compositions containing an
effective amount of a stain-removing anionic surfactant. In particular, the invention is
directed to oral compositions including a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxy
functionality.
BACKGROUND
Unblemished white teeth have long been considered cosmetically desirable.
Unfortunately, in the absence of thorough dental cleaning, teeth can become discolored or
stained from color-causing substances present in food, beverages, tobacco, and the like, and
internal sources such as blood, amalgam-based fillings, and antibiotics (e.g., tetracycline).
The tooth structures that are generally responsible for presenting a stained appearance
are enamel, dentin, and the acquired pellicle. Tooth enamel is predominately formed from
inorganic material, mostly in the form of hydroxyapatite crystals, and further contain
approximately 5% organic material primarily in the form of collagen. In contrast, dentin is
composed of about 20% protein including collagen, the balance existing of inorganic
material, predominately hydroxyapatite crystals, similar to that found in enamel. The
acquired pellicle is a proteinaceous layer present on the surface of tooth enamel which
reforms rapidly after an intensive tooth cleaning.
Discoloration of teeth can result from extrinsic and/or intrinsic staining. Extrinsic
staining of the acquired pellicle can arise as a result of compounds, such as tannins and other
polyphenolic compounds, that have become trapped in and tightly bound to the proteinaceous
layer on the surface of the teeth. Discoloration from this type of staining can usually be
removed by mechanical methods of tooth cleaning. In contrast, mtrinsic staining occurs
when the staining compounds penetrate the enamel and even the dentin, or alternatively, such

staining arises from sources within the tooth. Discoloration from intrinsic staining is not
readily amenable to mechanical methods of tooth cleaning. Chemical methods, which utilize
substances that can penetrate into the tooth structure, are usually required to elminate such
discoloration.
Currently, there are a number of methods for removing stains in teeth. These methods
are generally based on the use of abrasives, hydrolytic agents or oxidizing agents to break
down the staining material. For example, mechanical methods of tooth cleaning are known
whereby the stain is mechanically abraded through the use of abrasives or polishing agents
normally employed in toothpaste preparations. Typical preparations containing abrasives are
toothpastes, gels or powder dentifrices, which require close contact with the teeth. Brushing
and similar scrubbing or polishing action is typically required as a compliment to successful
stain removal. Typical abrasives include hydrated silica, calcium carbonate, sodium
bicarbonate and alumina.
Hydrolytic agents including proteolytic enzymes can also be used to whiten teeth.
These products are usually in the form of pastes or gels, and function to whiten teeth by
removing the plaque and calculus that have been entrapped the stain.
Oxidizing agents such as urea peroxide, hydrogen peroxide or calcium peroxide,
represent the most common forms of whitening agents for tooth enamels. It is believed that
peroxides whiten teeth by releasing hydroxyl radicals capable of breaking down the
plaque/stain complex into a form that can be flushed away or removed by an abrasive.
Other active stain-removing components include surface-active agents, such as
anionic surfactants and chelators, which have been incorporated into stain-removing
compositions because of their stain-removing properties. For example, anionic surfactants
typically employed in dentifrice compositions include sodium lauryl sulfate and sodium N-
lauryl sarcosinate. Furthermore, chelators, such as polyphosphates, are typically employed in
dentifrice compositions as tartar control ingredients. For example, tetrasodium
pyrophosphate and sodium tri-polyphosphate are typical ingredients found in such
compositions.

Unlike toothpaste, mouthwash and other dentifrice compositions, gum compositions
present unique problems in delivering agents. Chewing gum compositions typically comprise
a water-insoluble gum base which provides the bulk to the gum composition, but which
invariably traps agents having compatibility with the gum base. Adding additional amounts
of an agent is problematical because the same can have an adverse affect on the integrity,
sensory and/or taste properties of the gum composition.
Stain-removing gum compositions are known. For example, gum compositions
including sodium tripolyphosphate and xylitol are known. Also, gum compositions are
known, which include hexametaphosphate and an abrasive silica material. Moreover, a
dental gum is known, which includes the following ingredients: sodium tripolyphosphate,
tetrasodium pyrophosphate, a silica abrasive and zinc acetate. A whitening gum composition
is also known, which includes the abrasives sodium bicarbonate and calcium carbonate, and
is sold under the brand name V6®.
U.S. Patent No. 5,603,920 to Rice discloses a dentifrice composition that may be used
in the form of a gum. The dentifrice composition includes a silica abrasive, a chelating agent
(disclosed as including a pyrophosphate salt) and a surfactant. The surfactant is disclosed as
preferably being selected from sarcosinate surfactants, isethionate surfactants and tartrate
surfactants. Exemplified surfactants are sodium lauryl sarcosinate and sodium lauryl sulfate.
Stain-removing gum compositions are known including anionic surfactants such as
fatty acid salts (see U.S. Patent Nos. 6,471,945, 6,479,071 and 6,696,044). For example,
sodium stearate is a fatty acid salt employed in a gum product sold under the brand name
Trident White®. Sodium stearate is a surfactant containing both hydropbilic and lipophilic
groups. This fatty acid salt is known to solubilize stains into saliva and to loosen the stain so
that they can be easily removed by brushing or salvia. It is also known to enter and break up
the continuous plaque matrix, and to prevent stain build-up by interfering with the calcium
bridge formation between plaque and food product. Encapsulating sodium stearate in sugar
alcohols, and only loosely containing sodium stearate within the gum composition, can
facilitate its release from the gum base.
It would be beneficial to provide further gum compositions for cleaning teeth, which
employ a stain-removing agent that can be both effectively incorporated into a chewing gum

composition and released therefrom during chewing in a manner that provides an effective
amount of the stain-removing agent(s). In particular, it would be advantageous to provide
oral compositions, such as chewing gums, that include a stain-removing agent(s) that can be
effectively released from a variety of gum bases, has high solubility in saliva, avoids
interaction with gum ingredients (e.g. lecithin) and avoids chemical changes in acidic
environments, such as fruit gums.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is generally directed to stain-removing oral compositions in
which a stain-removing material has been effectively incorporated therein so that a sufficient
amount is available for a stain-removing effect.
In one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a stain-removing oral
composition including an orally acceptable carrier and a surfactant in an effective amount to
remove stains from teeth, wherein the surfactant comprises a fatty acid salt having at least
one hydroxyl functionality. In some embodiments, the fatty acid salt is a salt of ricinoleic
acid.
The oral compositions of this invention can include, but are not limited to, any
number of compositions, includmg gums, confectionary compositions, toothpastes and
mouthwashes. For example, certain aspects of the present invention relate to stain-removing
gum compositions.
In some embodiments, the stain-removing gum composition may include a gum base
and a surfactant in an effective amount to remove stains from teeth, wherein the surfactant
includes a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality. The fatty acid salt in the
stain-removing gum composition maybe a salt of ricinoleic acid.
For example, in some embodiments, the invention provides a chewing gum
composition including: a salt of ricinoleic acid; and a chelating agent.

Furthermore, in some embodiments, there is provided a chewing gum composition
including: a gum base; and a salt of ricinoleic acid. The gum base may also include other
ingredients, such as abrasives and/or chelating agents.
For example, in some embodiments, there is provided a chewing gum composition
including: a gum base; a salt of ricinoleic acid; and a chelating agent.
In some embodiments, there is provided a chewing gum composition including: a
gum base; a salt of ricinoleic acid; a chelating agent; and an abrasive agent.
Moreover, in some embodiments, there is provided a stain-removing gum
composition including at least one ingestible fatty acid salt derived from an extract from the
plant Ricinus spp, Euphorbiaceae. Ricinoleic acid is known to account for about 90% of the
triglyceride fatty acids of castor oil from the seeds of this plant.
In one particular embodiment, the invention provides a chewing gum composition
including: a gum base present in amounts of about 20 to about 40% by weight of the chewing
gum composition; sodium ricinoleate present in amounts of about 0.05 to about 10% by
weight of the chewing gum composition; silicon dioxide present in amounts of about 0.1 to
about 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition; and sodium tripolyphosphate present
in amounts of about 0.1 to about 5% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
Other aspects of the present invention provide methods of preparing and using the
inventive stain-removing compositions herein.
In some embodiments, the invention provides a method for removing stains from
teeth that includes: providing an oral composition comprising an orally acceptable carrier and
a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionaUty, and contacting the teeth with the
provided composition for a sufficient time to remove stains from the teeth. For example, in
one embodiment, stains may be removed from teeth by chewing an effective amount of a
stain-removing gum composition provided herein.

Gum compositions provided herein can be prepared in any number of ways. For
example, a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality may be combined with a
gum base, or with a coating for the gum, or with both.
In some embodiments, the present invention provides a method of preparing a stain-
removing gum composition that includes: heating a gum base to soften the base; mixing the
softened gum base with a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality to obtain a
substantially homogeneous mixture; cooling .the mixture; and forming the cooled mixture into
individual gum pieces. Other components, such as including, but not limited to, sweeteners,
fiavorants, fillers and colorants may also be included in the gum base, as will be described in
greater detail below.
Furthermore, in some embodiments, the present invention provides a method of
preparing a stain-removing gum composition, wherein the surfactant component is included
within a coating for the gum. In one embodiment, the method includes first heating a gum
base to soften the base; and mixing the softened gum base with at least one of the following
components so as to obtain a substantially homogeneous mixture: elastomer, wax, emulsifier,
bulking agent, filler, humectant, flavorant, colorant, dispersing agent, softener, plasticizer,
preservative, warming agent, cooling agent, tooth whitening agent and sweetener. The
method can further include cooling the mixture; forming the cooled mixture into individual
gum pieces; and next coating the gum pieces with an aqueous coating solution including a
fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality. Again, in one form of the present
invention, the fatty acid salt is a salt of ricinoleic acid.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
As used herein the transitional term "comprising," (also "comprises," etc.) which is
synonymous with "including," "containing," or "characterized by," is inclusive or open-
ended and does not exclude additional, unrecited elements or method steps, regardless of its
use in the preamble or the body of a claim.
As used herein, the term "gum compositions" is intended to include any gum
compositions, including "chewing gum" and "bubble gum."

The term "fatty acid salt" is a compound formed by replacing hydrogen in a fatty acid
by a metal (or a radical that acts like a metal).
"Hydroxy fatty acid salts" as used herein are fatty acid salts having at least one
hydroxyl functionality. The hydroxyl group may occur at various positions in the carbon
chain which can be saturated or monoenoic. The term is intended to include salts derived
from polyhydroxy fatty acids, which are most frequently produced by lipoxygenase activities.
The present invention is directed to compositions with stain-removing properties for
producing a whitening effect on dental surfaces that are treated with the same. Such
compositions are especially suitable for removing stains, which adhere to, or are entrapped in
materials on, the surface of teeth and for preventing build-up of the stain entrapping material
and stains on dental surfaces. The compositions of the present invention are meant to include
products, which are not intentionally swallowed for purposes of systemic administration of
therapeutic agents, but are retained in the oral cavity for a sufficient time to contact the dental
surfaces for purposes of providing beneficial dental effects.
The compositions of the present invention may be in a form selected from, for
example, dentifrices including mouthwashes, mouth rinses, toothpastes, tooth powders, tooth
hardeners, antiplaque compositions, dental creams, dental flosses, liquids, gels, and the like;
chewing gums, including center-filled gums, and the like; and confectionaries, including
mints, lozenges, and the like. In some embodiments, the compositions of the present
invention are in the form of chewing gums.
In accordance with the present invention, a stain-removing effective amount of a fatty
acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality is employed in the compositions of the
present invention to provide effective stain-removing activity. Applicants have discovered
that fatty acid salts having at least one hydroxyl functionality improve stain-removing activity
over the activity of other fatty acid salts. Moreover, relative to other fatty acid salts,
Applicants have discovered that hydroxy fatty acid salts are better able to prevent build-up of
stain entrapping material and stains on dental surfaces. Hydroxy fatty acid salts have a better
affinity for the tooth surface, penetrate the stain/plaque faster, and bind calcium stronger
because of the hydroxyl group occurring at a position in the carbon chain. This facilitates the
effective removal of dental stains and allows for the formation of a film on teeth for

preventing further stains. Hydroxy fatty acid salts have a greater solubility in saliva and less
of an affinity for the gum base relative to other fatty acid salts. This allows it to solubilize the
stain into the saliva and loosen it so that it is easily removed by brushing or saliva.
Moreover, unlike other fatty acid salts, hydroxy fatty acid salts do not substantially interact
with ingredients, such as lecithin, and have less of a tendency to change in acidic
environments, such as those present in fruit gum. Significantly, hydroxy fatty acid salts, such
as salts of ricinoleic acid, are also known to have antibacterial efficacy. For example, it is
known to employ castor oil soap in a dentifrice composition in order to render mouth bacteria
and their products harmless by treating them with the composition.
In some embodiments, the stain-removing oral compositions of the present invention
include the combination of a hydroxy fatty acid salt and a chelating agent. Applicants have
discovered that this combination of stain-removing agents improves stain-removing activity
over the activity of the individual component stain-removing agents alone. Moreover, the
combination of stain-removing agents enables reduction of the amount of each of the stain-
removing agents in the composition, avoiding unpleasant tastes and mouthfeel.
Polyphosphates are one group of agents suitable for use in the present invention as chelators.
Chelators are capable of strongly binding with metal ions, such as calcium. For example,
chelating agents are able to complex calcium found in the cell walls of bacteria, a major
component of plaque. Chelating agents can also disrupt plaque by removing calcium from
the calcium bridges which help hold the plaque matrix together.
In some embodiments, stain-removing oral compositions of the present invention
include a hydroxy fatty acid salt and an abrasive agent. This combination of stain-removing
agents improves stain-removing activity over the activity of the individual component stain-
removing agents alone. Furthermore, the combination of stain-removing agents enables
reduction of the amount of each of the stain-removing agents in the composition, avoiding
unpleasant tastes and mouthfeel.
In some embodiments, the stain-removing oral compositions according to the present
invention include the combination of a hydroxy fatty acid salt, a chelating agent and an
abrasive agent. This combination of stain-removing agents significantly improves stain-
removing activity over the activity of the individual components stain-removing agents alone,
and also enables reduction of the amount of each of the stain-removing agents in the

composition. In particular, matured stains can be mechanically abraded through the use of
the abrasive. Brushing, scrubbing, polishing, or chewing can compliment successful stain
removal. The hydroxy fatty acid salt and the chelating agent (e.g., a polyphosphate) serve as
surface-active agents. Both of these actives help to soften the pellicle film on the teeth and
have the ability to penetrate the stain matrix and facilitate its removal. Moreover, a hydroxy
fatty acid salt is a film-forming surfactant, which is capable of binding calcium because of its
hydroxyl group. This allows it to have a better affinity for the tooth surface, to penetrate the
stain/plaque faster and to form a film for preventing stain formation.
The term "stain-removing effective amount" as used herein is an amount of the
combination of stain-removing agent(s) disclosed herein that is sufficient to prevent,
eliminate, or at least reduce, the presence of stains on dental surfaces in warm-blooded
animals including humans, but low enough to avoid any undesirable side effects. This stain-
removing effective amount of the combination of stain-removing agent(s) of the present
invention may vary with the type and extent of the particular stain, the age and physical
condition of the warm-blooded animal, including humans being treated, the duration of
treatment, the nature of concurrent therapy, the specific stain-removing agent employed, and
the particular carrier from which the stain-removing agent is applied.
The concentration of the stain-removing agents in the composition of the present
invention depends on the type of composition (e.g., toothpaste, mouthwash and rinse,
lozenge, chewing gum, confectionary, and the like) used to apply the stain-removing agents
to the dental surfaces, due to the differences in the efficiency of the compositions contacting
the teeth and due also to the effective amount of the composition generally used. The
concentration may also depend on the levels of the stains present.
Except as otherwise noted, the amount of the ingredients incorporated into the
compositions according to the present invention is designated as percentage by weight based
on the total weight of the composition.
As described above, a stain-removing oral composition of the present invention can
be a gum composition, such as chewing gum composition. The chewing gum compositions
of the present invention may be coated or uncoated, and be in the form of slabs, sticks,
pellets, balls and the like. The composition of the different forms of the chewing gum

compositions will be similar but may vary with regard to the ratio of the ingredients. For
example, coated gum compositions may contain a lower percentage of softeners. Pellets and
balls may have a chewing gum core, which has been coated with either a sugar solution or a
sugarless solution to create the hard shell. Slabs and sticks are usually formulated to be softer
in texture than the chewing gum core. In some cases the hydroxy fatty acid salt may have a
softening effect on the gum base. In order to adjust for any potential undesirable softening
effect that the surfactant active (e.g., hydroxy fatty acid salt) may have on the gum base, it
may be beneficial to formulate a slab or stick gum having a firmer texture than usual (i.e., use
less conventional softener than is typically employed).
Center-filled gum is another common gum form. The gum portion has a similar
composition and mode of manufacture to that described above. However, the center-fill is
typically an aqueous liquid or gel, which is injected into the center of the gum during
processing. The stain-removing agent(s) could optionally be incorporated into the center-fill
during manufacture of the fill, incorporated directly into the chewing gum portion of the total
gum composition, or both. The center-filled gum may also be optionally coated and may be
prepared in various forms, such as in the form of a lollipop.
In some embodiments of the present invention, a coated gum may be formed, wherein
the stain-removing agent(s) is in at least one of the core or the coating. For example, in some
embodiments, an abrasive agent is incorporated into the coating, and the surface actives (i.e.,
surfactant and chelating agent) are incorporated into the gum base. By providing the abrasive
in the coating, the stain is first mechanically abraded by the abrasive in combination with
chewing, which requires close contact with the teeth. In particular, the abrasive tends to have
a short time before it goes into solution. Whereas the abrasive continues to have a chemical
effect in removing the stain after it is released from the coating into the saliva, it may be
advantageous to enhance the mechanical abrasion initially by providing it in the coating
layer. Furthermore, the coating provides another effective vehicle for delivering the hydroxy
fatty acid salt and/or the chelating agent.
It is also well within the contemplation of the present invention that the stain-
removing agent(s) can be incorporated into the gum base. The gum base provides another
effective vehicle for delivering stain-removing agent(s), such as the abrasives and the
surface- active agents because it permits protracted contact of the stain-removing agents to

the teeth. For example, the abrasive, surfactant and chelating agent can chemically remove
the stain once released from the gum base and/or coating into saliva.
Chewing gum compositions of the present invention may include a gum base and
most of the other typical chewing composition components, such as sweeteners, softeners,
flavorants and the like. At least one stain-removing hydroxy fatty acid salt is employed in the
inventive gum compositions.
In accordance with one aspect of a gum composition of the present invention, the
stain-removing hydroxy fatty acid salt may be added during the manufacture of the gum
composition, that is, with the sweeteners, flavorants and the like. In another aspect of the
present invention, the hydroxy fatty acid salt may be added as one of the last steps in the
formation of the gum composition. This process allows for the surfactant to be incorporated
into the gum composition without materially binding it therein such as may occur if the stain-
removing agent is mixed directly with the gum base. Thus, although the surfactant is quite
soluble in saliva and can be effectively released from the gum base, by only loosely
containing it within the gum composition, it is anticipated that the surfactant can be even
more effectively released therefrom during a typical chewing operation. Moreover, the
surfactant may be encapsulated or absorbed on a particulate substrate (for example, in a sugar
alcohol, wax or polymer such as polyvinyl acetate) to further facilitate delivery, if desired.
Surfactants
The oral compositions of the present invention may include desirable stain-removing
agent(s) as provided herein. For example, the composition may include anionic surfactants
and nonionic surfactants or mixtures thereof. Anionic surfactants useful herein include
water-soluble salts of hydroxy fatty acids having from 14 to 25 carbon atoms. In some
embodiments, the salt includes a metal ion that can be a divalent metal ion or a monovalent
metal ion. For example, the metal ion can be selected from sodium, potassium, calcium,
magnesium and combinations thereof.
Suitable examples of hydroxy fatty acid salts include salts of higher fatty acids, such
as ricinoleic acid, castor oil and ergot oil. Ricinoleic acid accounts for about 90% of the
triglyceride fatty acids of castor oil, and up to about 40% of the glyceride fatty acids of ergot
oil. Other suitable hydroxy fatty acid salts include, but are not limited to, those derived from

the following: lesquerolic acid, densipolic acid, auricolic acid and β-dimorphecolic acid.
Combinations of hydroxy fatty acid salts may also be employed.
The water-soluble salts of hydroxy fatty acids may be derived from naturally
occurring fatty acids having at least one hydroxyl functionality, such as ricinoleic acid.
Furthermore, the surfactants employed in the present invention or the fatty acids from which
they are derived may be chemically or enzymatically modified so as to contain at least one
hydroxyl functionality.
The fatty acid salts may be derived from fatty acids found, for example, in animals,
plants or bacteria. The polar -COOH group on short-chain fatty acids (e.g., 2-4 carbon
atoms) and even medium-chain (e.g., 6 to 10 carbon atoms) is typically enough to make them
soluble in water. However, as chain length increases (e.g., from 14 to 25 carbons), the fatty
acid type becomes progressively less water soluble and tends to take on oily or fatty
characteristics. The presence of a hydroxy group on long-chain fatty acids increases water
solubility. Therefore, Applicants have found that water-soluble salts of hydroxy fatty acids
having from 14 to 25 carbon atoms are useful in the compositions of the present invention. In
particular, the water solubility of a hydroxy fatty acid salt allows it to solubilize an
established stain into the saliva and loosens it so that it can be easily removed by chewing,
brushing or saliva.
In some embodiments, the inventive oral compositions can include a hydroxy fatty
acid salt in combination with other anionic or nonionic surfactants. For example, other
suitable surfactants may include the following anionic or non-ionic surfactants: sulfated
butyl oleate, medium and long chain fatty acid esters, sodium oleate, salts of fumaric acid,
potassium glomate, organic acid esters of mono- and diglycerides, stearyl monoglyceridyl
citrate, succistearin, dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate, glycerol tristearate, lecithin, hydroxylated
lecithin, sodium lauryl sulfate, acetylated monoglycerides, succinylated monoglycerides,
monoglyceride citrate, ethoxylated mono- and diglycerides, sorbitan monostearate, calcium
stearyl-2-lactylate, sodium stearyl lactylate, lactylated fatty acid esters of glycerol and
propylene glycerol, glycerol-lactoesters of C8-C24 fatty acids, polyglycerol esters of C8-C-24
fatty acids, propylene glycol alginate, sucrose C8-C24 fatty acid esters, diacetyl tartaric and
citric acid esters of mono- and diglycerides, triacetin, sarcosinate surfactants, isethionate
surfactants, tautate surfactants, pluronics, polyethylene oxide condensates of alkyl phenols,

products derived from the condensation of ethylene oxide with the reaction product of
propylene oxide and ethylene diamine, ethylene oxide condensates of aliphatic alcohols, long
chain tertiary amine oxides, long chain tertiary phosphine oxides, long chain dialkyl
sulfoxides and mixtures thereof.
The surfactant (e.g., sodium ricinoleate), alone or in combination with other
surfactants, may be present in oral compositions of the present invention in concentrations of
about 0.001% to about 20% by weight of the total composition. In some embodiments, the
surfactant may be present at about 0.05 to about 10% by weight of the total composition.
Moreover, in some embodiments, the surfactant may be present in amounts of about 0.05 to
about 2% by weight of the total composition.
Chelating Agents
As described above, the oral compositions of the present invention may optionally
include chelating agents. Chelating agents strongly interact with metal ions, such as the
calcium found in the cell walls of mouth bacteria. Chelating agents can also disrupt plaque
by removing calcium from the calcium bridges which help hold this biomass intact.
One group of agents suitable for use as chelating agents in the compositions of the
present invention are polyphosphates. In some embodiments, the chelating agent is a
phosphate salt selected from the following: pyrophosphates, triphosphates, polyphosphates,
polyphosphonates and combinations thereof. The chelating agent can be a dialkali metal
pyrophosphate salt, a tetra alkali polyphosphate salt or a combination thereof. For example,
in some embodiments, the chelating agent can be selected from the following: tetrasodium
pyrophosphate, tetrapotassium pyrophosphate, sodium tripolyphosphate and combinations of
these. Other chelating agents that can be employed in the compositions of the present
invention may include tartaric acid and salts thereof, citric acid and alkali metal citrates and
mixtures thereof.
In some embodiments, the chelating agent is present in amounts of about 0.001 to
about 5% by weight of the inventive oral composition. Furthermore, in some embodiments,
the chelating agent is present in amounts of about 0.5 to about 3% by weight of the oral
composition.

Abrasive Agent
In some embodiments, the oral compositions of the present invention include an
abrasive agent. Suitable abrasives include silicas, aluminas, phosphates, carbonates and
combinations thereof. In some embodiments, the abrasive agent is a silica selected from:
precipitated silica, silica gels and combinations thereof. Moreover, in some embodiments the
abrasive agent is selected from the following: calcium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium
metaphosphate, potassium metaphosphate, tricalcium phosphate, dehydrated dicalcium
phosphate and combinations thereof.
The abrasive polishing material contemplated for use in the compositions of the
present invention can be any material which does not excessively abrade dentin. However,
silica dental abrasives have unique benefits of exceptional dental cleaning and polishing
performance without unduly abrading tooth enamel or dentin.
The silica abrasive polishing materials herein, as well as other abrasives, generally
have an average particle size ranging between about 0.1 to about 30 microns, and preferably
from about 5 to about 15 microns. The abrasive can be precipitated silica or silica gels such
as the silica xerogels described in U.S. Patent No. 3,538,230 to Pader, et al. and U.S. Patent
No. 3,862,307 to DiGiulio, both incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. Preferred
are the silica xerogels marketed under the trade name "Syloid" by the W.R. Grace &
Company, Davison Chemical Division. Also preferred are the precipitated silica materials,
such as those marketed by the J.M. Huber Corporation under the trade name "Zeodenf',
particularly the silica carrying the designation "Zeodent 119". The types of silica dental
abrasives useful in the present invention are described in'detail in U.S. Patent No. 4,340,583
to Wason, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Silica abrasives described in U.S.
Patent Application Serial Nos. 08/434,147 and 08/434,149, both filed May 2,1995, are also
herein incorporated by reference.
In some embodiments, the abrasive is present in amounts from about 0.1 to about 30%
by weight of the oral composition. The abrasive agent may be more typically employed in
amounts from about 0.5 to about 5% by weight of the total composition. The abrasive in the
toothpaste compositions of this invention is generally present at a level of from about 0.5% to
about 10% by weight of the composition. Moreover, inventive chewing gum may contain,
from about 1% to about 6% of abrasive, by weight of the oral composition.

The silica used to prepare a chewing gum composition of the present invention is
differentiated by means of its oil absorption value, having oil absorption value of less than
100 cc/lOOg, and preferably in the range of from 45 cc/lOOg silica to less than 70 cc/lOOg
silica. Silica particularly useful in the practice of the present invention is marketed.under the
trade designation SYLODENT XWA GRACE Davison Co., Columbia, DS 21044. An
example of such silica is SYLODENT XWA 150, a silica precipitate having a water content
of 4.7% by weight averaging from about 7 to about 11 microns in diameter, having an
Einlehner Hardness of 5, a BET surface area of 390 m.sup.2/g of silica, an oil absorption of
less than 70 cm.sup.3/100g of silica. This silica exhibits low abrasiveness to tooth enamel.
The silica abrasive can be used as the sole abrasive in preparing a chewing gum of the
present invention or in combination with other known abrasives or pohshing agents,
including calcium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium metaphosphate, potassium
metaphosphate, tricalcium phosphate, dehydrated dicalcium phosphate, or other siliceous
materials, or combinations thereof.
In some embodiments, the total quantity of abrasive silica present in a chewing gum
composition of the present invention is at a concentration of from about 0.1 to about 20% by
weight. Moreover, in some embodiments, the total quantity of abrasive silica present in a
chewing gum composition of the present invention is from about 0.5% to about 5% by
weight.
Orally Acceptable Carrier
The compositions of the present invention include an orally acceptable carrier, in an
appropriate amount to accommodate the other components of the formulation. The term
"orally acceptable carrier" refers to a vehicle capable of being mixed with the active
components for delivery to the oral cavity for tooth whitening and cleaning purposes, and
which will not cause harm to warm-blooded animals, including humans. The orally
acceptable carriers further include those components of the composition that are capable of
being comingled without interaction in a manner which would substantially reduce the
composition's stability and/or efficacy for dental stain-removal in the oral cavity of warm-
blooded animals, including humans, in. accordance with the compositions and methods of the
present invention.

The orally acceptable carriers of the present invention can include one or more
compatible solid or liquid filler diluents or encapsulating substances, which are suitable for
oral administration. The carriers or excipients employed in the present invention may be in
any form appropriate to the mode of delivery, for example, solutions, colloidal dispersions,
emulsions, suspensions, rinses, gels, foams, powders, solids, and the like, and can include
conventional components of toothpastes (including gels), mouthwashes and rinses, mouth
sprays, chewing gums, lozenges, and confectionaries. Carriers suitable for the preparation of
compositions of the present invention are well known in the art. Their selection will depend
on secondary considerations like taste, cost, shelf stability and the like.
Types of additives or ingredients, which may be included in the present compositions
include one or more desirable stain-removing agents as provided herein. The inventive
compositions may also include a component selected from the following: elastomers,
elastomer solvents, waxes, emulsifiers, plasticizers, softeners, dispersing agents, sweeteners,
flavorants, humectants, active agents, cooling agents, warming agents, tooth whitening
agents, colorants, bulking agents, fillers and combinations thereof.
In some embodiments, an active agent can be a fluoride compound or an antibacterial
compound. For example, a known antibacterial compound is triclosan.
Moreover, in some embodiments a film-forming polymer may be included in the
compositions of the present invention. For example, the film-forming polymer may be a
synthetic anionic polymeric polycarboxylate (SAPP), such a PVM/MA copolymer (Gantrez
S-97, GAF Corp.). Such polymers are described in U.S. Patent Nos. 5,334,375 and
5,505,933, which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety. SAPP's have
previously been described as being useful for dentin sensitivity reduction. Moreover, SAPP's
have previously been described as antibacterial-enhancing agents, which enhance delivery of
an antibacterial agent to oral surfaces, and which enhance the retention of the antibacterial
agent on oral surfaces. It is well within the contemplation of the present invention that film-
forming polymers, such as PVM/MA copolymer, maybe employed in the compositions of
the present invention as a means of reducing stain formation.
As described above, in some embodiments, the inventive composition may be a gum
composition including a gum base and a surfactant, which comprises a fatty acid salt having

at least one hydroxyl functionality. In some embodiments, the surfactant is the hydroxy fatty
acid salt of ricinoleic acid.
Gum compositions according to the present invention may further include a chelator,
such as a polyphosphate. Suitable examples are the same as those described above.
Moreover, gum compositions of the present invention may include abrasives, suitable
examples of which are the same as those described above. For example, in one specific
embodiment, the abrasive in the gum is a silica abrasive. A useful silica is one having an oil
absorption value of less than 100 cc/100 g silica, and preferably in the range of from 45
cc/100 g silica to less than 70 cc/100 g silica. A suitable silica is sold under the name
SYLODENT XWA (Davison Co., Columbia, MD).
In addition to the hydroxy fatty acid salts, it is also well within the contemplation of
the present invention that the inventive gum compositions may further include other anionic
or nonionic surfactants. Suitable examples are the same as those described above. These
may be included within the gum base, for example.
The gum base may be present in an amount of about 20 to about 40% by weight of the
total composition. It may include any component known in the chewing gum art. For
example, the gum base may include sweeteners, elastomers, bulking agents, waxes, elastomer
solvents, emulsifiers, plasticizers, fillers, mixtures thereof and may include a desirable stain-
removing agent(s) as provided herein.
In some embodiments, the gum base may include a suitable sugar bulking agent. For
example, the gum base may include a specific polyol composition including at least one
polyol which is from about 30% to about 80% by weight of the gum base, and desirably from
50% to about 60%. The polyol composition may include any polyol known in the art
including, but not limited to maltitol, sorbitol, erythritol, xylitol, mannitol, isomalt, lactitol
and combinations thereof. Lycasin which is a hydrogenated starch hydrolysate including
sorbitol and maltitol, may also be used.
Maltitol is a sweet, water-soluble sugar alcohol useful as a bulking agent in the
preparation of beverages and foodstuffs and is more fully described in U.S. Pat. No.

3,708,396, which disclosure is incorporated herein by reference. Maltitol is made by
hydrogenation of maltose which is the most common reducing disaccharide and is found in
starch and other natural products.
The polyol composition which may include one or more different polyols which may
be derived from a genetically modified organism ("GMO") or GMO free source. For
example, the maltitol may be GMO free maltitol or provided by a hydrogenated starch
hydrolysate.
Some embodiments may include a polyol composition including maltitol which has a
greater crystalline density than sorbitol. Other polyols which exhibit a greater crystalline
density than sorbitol include xylitol and mannitol. Polyols of a greater crystalline density
may be useful in center-fill gums. Specifically, a polyol of a greater crystalline density
results in a structure with fewer pores, which provides less surface area for potential moisture
or fluid migration into the gum region from the liquid-fill.
The polyol composition may also have a sweetness of greater than about 50% of the
sweetness of sucrose. Also, the polyol composition of some embodiments has a solubility of
less than 67% by weight at 25°C and greater than about 18% by weight at 25°C
The polyol composition may include particles of a variety of sizes. Specifically, the
average particle size of the polyol composition ranges from about 30 microns to about 600
microns, more specifically from about 30 microns to about 200 microns.
The elastomers (rubbers) employed in the gum base will vary greatly depending upon
various factors such as the type of gum. base desired, the consistency of gum composition
desired and the other components used in the composition to make the final chewing gum
product. The elastomer may be any water-insoluble polymer known in the art, and includes
those gum polymers utilized for chewing gums and bubble gums. Illustrative examples of
suitable polymers in gum bases include both natural and synthetic elastomers. For example,
those polymers which are suitable in gum base compositions include, without limitation,
natural substances (of vegetable origin) such as chicle, natural rubber, crown gum, nispero,
rosidinha, jelutong, perillo, niger gutta, tunu, balata, guttapercha, lechi capsi, sorva, gutta kay,
and the like, and mixtures thereof. Examples of synthetic elastomers include, without

limitation, styrene-butadiene copolymers (SBR), polyisobutylene, isobutylene-isoprene
copolymers, polyethylene, polyvinyl acetate and the like, and mixtures thereof.
The amount of elastomer employed in the gum base may vary depending upon
various factors such as the type of gum base used, the consistency of the gum composition
desired and the other components used in the composition to make the final chewing gum
product. In general, the elastomer will be present in the gum base in an amount from about
10% to about 60% by weight of the gum region, desirably from about 35% to about 40% by
weight.
When a wax is present in the gum base, it softens the polymeric elastomer mixture
and improves the elasticity of the gum base. The waxes employed will have a melting point
below about 60°C, and preferably between about 45°C. and about 55°C. The low melting
wax may be a paraffin wax. The wax may be present in the gum base in an amount from
about 6% to about 10%, and preferably from about 7% to about 9.5%, by weight of the gum
base.
In addition to the low melting point waxes, waxes having a higher melting point may
be used in the gum base in amounts up to about 5%, by weight of the gum base. Such high
melting waxes include beeswax, vegetable wax, candelilla wax, carnuba wax, most petroleum
waxes, and the like, and mixtures thereof.
In addition to the components set out above, the gum base may include a variety of
other ingredients, such as components selected from elastomer solvents, emulsifiers,
plasticizers, fillers, and mixtures thereof.
The gum base may contain elastomer solvents to aid in softening the elastomer
component. Such elastomer solvents may include those elastomer solvents known in the art,
for example, terpinene resins such as polymers of alpha-pinene or beta-pinene, methyl,
glycerol and pentaerythritol esters of rosins and modified rosins and gums such as
hydrogenated, dimerized and polymerized rosins, and mixtures thereof. Examples of
elastomer solvents suitable for use herein may include the pentaerythritol ester of partially
hydrogenated wood and gum rosin, the pentaerythritol ester of wood and gum rosin, the
glycerol ester of wood rosin, the glycerol ester of partially dimerized wood and gum rosin,

the glycerol ester of polymerized wood and gum rosin, the glycerol ester of tall oil rosin, the
glycerol ester of wood and gum rosin and the partially hydrogenated wood and gum rosin and
the partially hydrogenated methyl ester of wood and rosin, and the like, and mixtures thereof.
The elastomer solvent may be employed in the gum base in amounts from about 2% to about
15%, and preferably from about 7% to about 11%, by weight of the gum base.
The gum base may also include emulsifiers which aid in dispersing any immiscible
components into a single stable system. The emulsifiers useful in this invention include
glyceryl monostearate, lecithin, fatty acid monoglycerides, diglycerides, propylene glycol
monostearate, and the like, and mixtures thereof. The emulsifier may be employed in
amounts from about 2% to about 15%, and more specifically, from about 7% to about 11%,
by weight of the gum base.
The gum base may also include plasticizers or softeners to provide a variety of
desirable textures and consistency properties. Because of the low molecular weight of these
ingredients, the plasticizers and softeners are able to penetrate the fundamental structure of
the gum base making it plastic and less viscous. Useful plasticizers and softeners include
lanolin, palmitic acid, oleic acid, stearic acid, sodium stearate, potassium stearate, glyceryl
triacetate, glyceryl lecithin, glyceryl monostearate, propylene glycol monostearate, acetylated
monoglyceride, glycerine, and the like, and mixtures thereof. Waxes, for example, natural
and synthetic waxes, hydrogenated vegetable oils, petroleum waxes such as polyurethane
waxes, polyethylene waxes, paraffin waxes, microcrystalline waxes, fatty waxes, sorbitan
monostearate, tallow, propylene glycol, mixtures thereof, and the like, may also be
incorporated into the gum base. The plasticizers and softeners are generally employed in the
gum base in amounts up to about 20% by weight of the gum base, and more specifically in
amounts from about 9% to about 17%, by weight of the gum base.
Plasticizers also include are the hydrogenated vegetable oils and include soybean oil
and cottonseed oil which may be employed alone or in combination. These plasticizers
provide the gum base with good texture and soft chew characteristics. These plasticizers and
softeners are generally employed in amounts from about 5% to about 14%, and more
specifically in amounts from about 5% to about 13.5%, by weight of the gum base.

Anhydrous glycerin may also be employed as a softening agent, such as the
commercially available United States Pharmacopeia (USP) grade. Glycerin is a syrupy liquid
with a sweet warm taste and has a sweetness of about 60% of that of cane sugar. Because
glycerin is hygroscopic, the anhydrous glycerin maybe maintained under anhydrous
conditions throughout the preparation of the chewing gum composition.
Although softeners maybe present to modify the texture of the gum composition, they
may be present in reduced amounts as compared to typical gum compositions. For example,
they may be present from about 0.5 to about 10% by weight based on the total weight of the
composition, or they may not be present in the composition, since the surfactant active can
act as a softener.
The gum base of this invention may also include effective amounts of bulking agents
such as mineral adjuvants which may serve as fillers and textural agents. Useful mineral
adjuvants include calcium carbonate, magnesium carbonate, durnina, aluminum hydroxide,
aluminum silicate, talc, tricalcium phosphate, dicalcium phosphate, calcium sulfate and the
like, and mixtures thereof. These fillers or adjuvants maybe used in the gum base
compositions in various amounts. Preferably the amount of filler, when used, will be present
in an amount from about 15% to about 40%, and desirably from about 20% to about 30%, by
weight of the gum base.
A variety of traditional ingredients may be optionally included in the gum base in
effective amounts such as coloring agents, antioxidants, preservatives, flavoring agents, and
the like. For example, titanium dioxide and other dyes suitable for food, drug and cosmetic
applications, known as F. D. & C. dyes, may be utilized. An anti-oxidant such as butylated
hydroxytoluene (BHT), butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), propyl gallate, and mixtures
thereof, may also be included. Other conventional chewing gum additives known to one
having ordinary skill in the chewing gum art may also be used in the gum base.
Some embodiments extend to methods of making the gum compositions. The manner
in which the gum base components are mixed is not critical and is performed using standard
techniques and apparatus known to those skilled in the art. In a typical method, an elastomer
is admixed with an elastomer solvent and/or a plasticizer and/or an emulsifier and agitated for
a period of from 1 to 30 minutes. The remaining ingredients, such as the low melting point

wax, are then admixed, either in bulk or incrementally, while the gum base mixture is
blended again for 1 to 30 minutes.
The gum composition may include amounts of conventional additives selected from,
but not limited to, the following: sweetening agents (sweeteners), plasticizers, softeners,
emulsifiers, waxes, fillers, bulking agents (carriers, extenders, bulk sweeteners), mineral
adjuvants, flavoring agents (flavors, flavorings), coloring agents (colorants, colorings),
antioxidants, acidulants, thickeners, medicaments, and the like, and mixtures thereof. Some
of these additives may serve more than one purpose. For example, in sugarless gum
compositions, a sweetener, such as maltitol or other sugar alcohol, may also function as a
bulking agent.
The plasticizers, softening agents, mineral adjuvants, waxes and antioxidants
discussed above, as being suitable for use in the gum base, may also be used in the chewing
gum composition. Examples of other conventional additives which may be used include
emulsifiers, such as lecithin and glyceryl monostearate, thickeners, used alone or in
combination with other softeners, such as methyl cellulose, alginates, carrageenan, xanthan
gum, gelatin, carob, tragacanth, locust bean, and carboxy methyl cellulose, acidulants such as
malic acid, adipic acid, citric acid, tartaric acid, fumaric acid, and mixtures thereof, and
fillers, such as those discussed above under the category of mineral adjuvants.
In some embodiments, the gum region may also contain a bulking agent. Suitable
bulking agents may be water-soluble and include sweetening agents selected from, but not
limited to, monosaccharides, disaccharides, polysaccharides, sugar alcohols, and mixtures
thereof; randomly bonded glucose polymers such as those polymers distributed under the
tradename POLYDEXTROSE by Pfizer, Inc., Groton, Conn.; isomalt (a racemic mixture of
alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-l,6-mannitol and alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-l,6-sorbitol manufactured
under the tradename PALATINIT by Suddeutsche Zucker), maltodextrins; hydrogenated
starch hydrolysates; hydrogenated hexoses; hydrogenated disaccharides; minerals, such as
calcium carbonate, talc, titanium dioxide, dicalcium phosphate; celluloses; and mixtures
thereof.
Suitable sugar bulking agents include monosaccharides, disaccharides and
polysaccharides such as xylose, ribulose, glucose (dextrose), mannose, galactose, fructose

(levulose), sucrose (sugar), maltose, invert sugar, partially hydrolyzed starch and corn syrup
solids, and mixtures thereof.
Suitable sugar alcohol bulking agents include sorbitol, xylitol, mannitol, galactitol,
maltitol, and mixtures thereof.
Suitable hydrogenated starch hydrolysates include those disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos.
25,959, 3,356,811,4,279,931 and various hydrogenated glucose syrups and/or powders
which contain sorbitol, hydrogenated disaccharides, hydrogenated higher polysaccharides, or
mixtures thereof. Hydrogenated starch hydrolysates are primarily prepared by the controlled
catalytic hydrogenation of corn syrups. The resulting hydrogenated starch hydrolysates are
mixtures of monomelic, dimeric, and polymeric saccharides. The ratios of these different
saccharides give different hydrogenated starch hydrolysates different properties. Mixtures of
hydrogenated starch hydrolysates, such as LYCASIN, a commercially available product
manufactured by Roquette Freres of France, and HYSTAR, a commercially available product'
manufactured by Lonza, Inc., of Fairlawn, N. J., are also useful.
The sweetening agents used may be selected from a wide range of materials including
water-soluble sweeteners, water-soluble artificial sweeteners, water-soluble sweeteners
derived from naturally occurring water-soluble sweeteners, dipeptide based sweeteners, and
protein based sweeteners, including mixtures thereof. Without being limited to particular
sweeteners, representative categories and examples include:
(a) water-soluble sweetening agents such as dihydrochalcones, monellin, steviosides,
glycyrrhizin, dihydroflavenol, and sugar alcohols such as sorbitol, mannitol, maltitol, and L-
aminodicarboxylic acid aminoalkenoic acid ester amides, such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat.
No. 4,619,834, which disclosure is incorporated herein by reference, and mixtures thereof;
(b) water-soluble artificial sweeteners such as soluble saccharin salts, i.e., sodium or
calcium saccharin salts, cyclamate salts, the sodium, ammonium or calcium salt of 3,4-
dihydro-6-methyl-l,2,3-oxathiazine-4-one-2,2-dioxide, the potassium salt of 3,4-dihydro-6-
methyl-l,2,3-oxathiazine-4-one-2,2-dioxide (Acesulfame-K), the free acid form of saccharin,
and mixtures thereof;
(c) dipeptide based sweeteners, such as L-aspartic acid derived sweeteners, such as
L-aspartyl-L-phenylalanine methyl ester (Aspartame) and materials described in U.S. Pat.
No. 3,492,131, L-alphaaspartyl-N-(2,2,4,4-tetramethyl-3-thietanyl)-D-alarimamide hydrate

(Alitame), methyl esters of L-aspartyl-L-phenylglycerine and L-aspartyl-L-2,5-
dihydrophenyl-glycine, L-aspartyl-2,5-dih.ydro-L-phenylalanine; L-aspartyl-L-(l-
cyclohexen)-alanine, and mixtures thereof;
(d) water-soluble sweeteners derived from naturally occurring water-soluble
sweeteners, such as chlorinated derivatives of ordinary sugar (sucrose), e.g.,
chlorodeoxysugar derivatives such as derivatives of chlorodeoxysucrose or
chlorodeoxygalactosucrose, known, for example, under the product designation of Sucralose;
examples of chlorodeoxysucrose and chlorodeoxygalactosucrose derivatives include but are
not limited to: l-chloro-l'-deoxysucrose; 4-chloro-4-deoxy-alpha-D-galactopyranosyl-alpha-
D-fructofuranoside, or 4-chloro-4-deoxygalactosucrose; 4-chloro-4-deoxy-alpha-D-
galactopyranosyl-1 -chloro-1-deoxy-beta-D-fructo-f uranoside, or 4,1 '-dichloro-4,1 '-
dideoxygalactosucrose; r,6'-dichloro 1 ',6-dideoxysucrose; 4-chloro-4-deoxy-alpha-D-
galactopyranosyl-l,6-dichloro-l,6-dideoxy-beta-D- fructofuranoside, or 4,r,6'-trichloro-
4,1 ',6'-trideoxygalactosucrose; 4,6-dichloro-4,6-dideoxy-alpha-D-galactopyranosyl-6-chloro-
6-deoxy-beta-D- fructofuranoside, or4,6,6'-trichloro-4,6,6'-trideoxygalactosucrose; 6,1',6'-
1ricMoro-6,r,6'-trideoxysucrose;456-dichloro-4,6-dideoxy-alpha-D-galacto-pyranosyl-l,6-
dichloro-l,6-dideox y-beta-D-fructofuranoside, or 4,6,r,6'-tetrachloro4,6,r,6'-
tetradeoxygalacto-sucrose; and 4,6,r,6'-tetradeoxy-sucrose, and mixtures thereof; and
(e) protein based sweeteners such as thaumaoccous danielli (Thaumatin I and H).
The intense sweetening agents may be used in many distinct physical forms well-
known in the art to provide an initial burst of sweetness and/or a prolonged sensation of
sweetness. Without being limited thereto, such physical forms include free forms, such as
spray dried, powdered, beaded forms, encapsulated forms, and mixtures thereof.
Desirably, the sweetener is a high intensity sweetener such as aspartame, sucralose,
and acesulfame potassium (Ace-K).
In general, an effective amount of sweetener may be utilized to provide the level of
sweetness desired, and this amount may vary with the sweetener selected. The amount of
sweetener may be present in amounts from about 0.001% to about 3%, by weight of the gum
composition, depending upon the sweetener or combination of sweeteners used. The exact
range of amounts for each type of sweetener may be selected by those skilled in the art.

The flavoring agents which may be used include those flavors known to the skilled
artisan, such as natural and artificial flavors. These flavorings may be chosen from synthetic
flavor oils and flavoring aromatics and/or oils, oleoresins and extracts derived from plants,
leaves, flowers, fruits, and so forth, and combinations thereof. Nonlimiting representative
flavor oils include spearmint oil, cinnamon oil, oil of wintergreen (methyl salicylate),
peppermint oil, clove oil, bay oil, anise oil, eucalyptus oil, thyme oil, cedar leaf oil, oil of
nutmeg, allspice, oil of sage, mace, oil of bitter almonds, and cassia oil. Also useful
flavorings are artificial, natural and synthetic fruit flavors such as vanilla, and citrus oils
including lemon, orange, lime, grapefruit, and fruit essences including apple, pear, peach,
grape, strawberry, raspberry, cherry, plum, pineapple, apricot and so forth. These flavoring
agents may be used in liquid or solid form and may be used individually or in admixture.
Commonly used flavors include mints such as peppermint, menthol, spearmint, artificial
vanilla, cinnamon derivatives, and various fruit flavors, whether employed individually or in
admixture.
Other useful flavorings include aldehydes and esters such as cinnamyl acetate,
cinnamaldehyde, citral diethylacetal, dihydrocarvyl acetate, eugenyl formate, p-
methylamisol, and so forth may be used. Generally any flavoring or food additive such as
those described in Chemicals Used in Food Processing, publication 1274, pages 63-258, by
the National Academy of Sciences, may be used. This publication is incorporated herein by
reference.
Further examples of aldehyde flavorings include but are not limited to acetaldehyde
(apple), benzaldehyde (cherry, almond), anisic aldehyde (licorice, anise), cinnamic aldehyde
(cinnamon), citral, i.e., alpha-citral (lemon, lime), neral, i.e., beta-citral (lemon, lime),
decanal (orange, lemon), ethyl vanillin (vanilla, cream), heliotrope, i.e., piperonal (vanilla,
cream), vanillin (vanilla, cream), alpha-amyl cinnamaldehyde (spicy fruity flavors),
butyraldehyde (butter, cheese), valeraldehyde (butter, cheese), citronellal (modifies, many
types), decanal (citrus fruits), aldehyde C-8 (citrus fruits), aldehyde C-9 (citrus fruits),
aldehyde C-12 (citrus fruits), 2-ethyl butyraldehyde (berry fruits), hexenal, i.e., trans-2 (berry
fruits), tolyl aldehyde (cherry, almond), veratraldehyde (vanilla), 2,6-dimethyl-5-heptenal,
i.e., melonal (melon), 2,6-dimethyloctanal (green fruit), and 2-dodecenal (citrus, mandarin),
cherry, grape, strawberry shortcake, and mixtures thereof.

In some embodiments, the flavoring agent may be employed in either liquid form
and/or dried form. When employed in the latter form, suitable drying means such as spray
drying the oil may be used. Alternatively, the flavoring agent may be absorbed onto water
soluble materials, such as cellulose, starch, sugar, maltodextrin, gum arabic and so forth or
may be encapsulated. The actual techniques for preparing such dried forms are well-known.
In some embodiments, the flavoring agents may be used in many distinct physical
forms well-known in the art to provide an initial burst of flavor and/or a prolonged sensation
of flavor. Without being limited thereto, such physical forms include free forms, such as
spray dried, powdered, beaded forms, encapsulated forms, and mixtures thereof.
The amount of flavoring agent employed herein may be a matter of preference subject
to such factors as the type of final chewing gum composition, the individual flavor, the gum
base employed, and the strength of flavor desired. Thus, the amount of flavoring may be
varied in order to obtain the result desired in the final product and such variations are within
the capabilities of those skilled in the art without the need for undue experimentation. In gum
compositions, the flavoring agent is generally present in amounts from about 0.02% to about
5%, and more specifically from about 0.1% to about 2%, and even more specifically, from
about 0.8% to about 1.8%, by weight of the chewing gum composition.
Coloring agents may be used in amounts effective to produce the desired color. The
coloring agents may include pigments which may be incorporated in amounts up to about
6%, by weight of the gum composition. For example, titanium dioxide may be incorporated
in amounts up to about 2%, and preferably less than about 1%, by weight of the gum
composition. The colorants may also include natural food colors and dyes suitable for food,
drug and cosmetic applications. These colorants are known as F.D.& C. dyes and lakes. The
materials acceptable for the foregoing uses are preferably water-soluble. Illustrative
nonlimiting examples include the indigoid dye known as F.D.& C. Blue No.2, which is the
disodium salt of 5,5-indigotindisulfonic acid. Similarly, the dye known as F.D.& C. Green
No.l comprises a rriphenylmethane dye and is the monosodium salt of 4-[4-(N-ethyl-p-
sulfomumbenzylarrmio)diphenylmethylene]-[1-(N-ethyl-N-p-sulfoniumbenzyl)-delta-2,5-
cyclohexadieneimine]. A full recitation of all F.D.& C. colorants and their corresponding
chemical structures may be found in the Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology,

3rd Edition, in volume 5 at pages 857-884, which text is incorporated herein by reference.
Suitable oils and fats usable in gum compositions include partially hydrogenated
vegetable or animal fats, such as coconut oil, palm kernel oil, beef tallow, and lard, among
others. These ingredients when used are generally present in amounts up to about 7%, and
preferably up to about 3.5%, by weight of the gum composition.
Some embodiments may include a method for preparing the gum compositions,
including both chewing gum and bubble gum compositions. The chewing gum compositions
may be prepared using standard techniques and equipment known to those skilled in the art.
The apparatus useful in accordance with some embodiments comprises mixing and heating
apparatus well known in the chewing gum manufacturing arts, and therefore the selection of
the specific apparatus will be apparent to the artisan.
Li some embodiments, a method of preparing a stain-removing gum composition
includes heating a gum base to soften the base and then mixing the softened gum base with a
fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality so as to obtain a substantially
homogeneous mixture. The method further includes cooling the mixture and forming the
cooled mixture into individual gum pieces. The hydroxy fatty acid salt may be a salt of
ricinoleic acid, such as sodium ricinoleate. Further ingredients may be mixed into the
softened gum base. For example, one or more of the following may typically be added:
bulking agent, filler, humectant, flavorant, colorant, dispersing agent, softener, plasticizer,
preservative, warming agent, cooling agent, tooth whitening agent and sweetener.
In some embodiments, gum pieces may be coated with an aqueous coating
composition, which may be applied by any method known in the art. The coating
composition may be present in an amount from about 25% to about 35% by weight of the
total gum piece, more specifically about 30% by weight of the gum piece.
The outer coating may be hard or crunchy. Typically, the outer coating may include
sorbitol, maltitol, xylitol, isomalt, and other crystallizable polyols; sucrose may also be used.
Flavors may also be added to yield unique product characteristics. Moreover, the outer
coating may include one or more of the stain-removing agents provided herein.

The coating, if present, may include several opaque layers, such that the chewing gum
composition is not visible through the coating itself, which can optionally be covered with a
further one or more transparent layers for aesthetic, textural and protective purposes. The
outer coating may also contain small amounts of water and gum arabic. The coating can be
further coated with wax. The coating may be applied in a conventional manner by successive
applications of a coating solution, with drying in between each coat. As the coating dries it
usually becomes opaque and is usually white, though other colorants may be added. A polyol
coating can be further coated with wax. The coating can further include colored flakes or
speckles.
If the composition comprises a coating, it is possible that one or more oral care actives
can be dispersed throughout the coating. This may be preferred if one or more oral care
actives is incompatible in a single phase composition with another of the actives.
Moreover, it is well within the contemplation of the present invention that providing
one or more of the stain-removing agents in the coating can enhance the stain-removing
efficacy of the total composition. For example, as described above, the mechanical abrasion
may be initially enhanced by providing the abrasive in the coating layer. Chemical cleaning
effects are also enhanced as a result.
Furthermore, the hydroxy fatty acid salt can be included in one or more of the
chewing gum regions such as the coating, the gum base or both. Additionally, the hydroxy
fatty acid salt can be added at different stages of the manufacture, alone or as a premix with
other components. For example, in some embodiments, the method for preparing a stain-
removing gum composition includes heating a gum base to soften the base; and mixing the
softened gum base with at least one of the following: elastomer, wax, emulsifier, bulking
agent, filler, humectant, flavorant, colorant, dispersing agent, softener, plasticizer,
preservative, warming agent, cooling agent, tooth whitening agent and sweetener to obtain a
substantially homogeneous mixture. The method also involves cooling the mixture; forming
the cooled mixture into individual gum pieces; and coating the gum pieces with an aqueous
coating solution including a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality. The
hydroxy fatty acid salt may be a salt of ricinoleic acid. One or more other ingredients may be
included in the coating composition, such as including, but not limited to, the following: gum
arabic, flavorant, colorant, sweetener, bulking agent, filler, anti-adherent compound,

dispersing agent, moisture absorbing compound, warming agent, cooling agent and film-
forming agent.
The coating may be formulated to assist with increasing the thermal stability of the
gum piece and preventing leaking of a liquid fill if the gum product is a center-filled gum. In
some embodiments, the coating may include a gelatin composition. The gelatin composition
may be added as a 40% by weight solution and may be present in the coating composition
from about 5% to about 10% by weight of the coating composition, and more specifically
about 7% to about 8%. The gel strength of the gelatin may be from about 130 bloom to about
250 bloom.
Additives, such as physiological cooling agents, throat-soothing agents, spices,
warming agents, tooth-whitening agents, breath-freshening agents, vitamins minerals,
caffeine, drugs and other actives may be included in any or all portions of the chewing gum
composition. Such components may be used in amounts sufficient to achieve their intended
effects.
With respect to cooling agents, a variety of well known cooling agents may be
employed. For example, among the useful cooling agents are included menthol, xylitol,
menthane, menthone, menthyl acetate, menthyl salicylate, N,2,3-trimethyl-2-isopropyl
butanamide (WS-23), N-ethyl-p-menthane-3-carboxamide (WS-3), menthyl succinate, 3,1-
menthoxypropane 1,2-diol, among others. These and other suitable cooling agents are further
described in the following U.S. patents, all of which are incorporated in their entirety by
reference hereto: U.S. 4,230,688 and 4,032,661 to Rowsell et al.; 4,459,425 to Amano et al.;
4,136,163 to Watson et al.; and 5,266,592 to Grub et al. These cooling agents maybe present
in one or more of the outer gum coatings, the gum region surrounding the liquid fill, the
liquid fill per se, or in any combination of those three gum areas. Cooling agents, when used
in the outer coating composition for the gum, are generally present in amount of 0.01 % to
about 1.0%. When used in the other portions of the gum, such as the gum region or the
center fill, they may be present in amounts of about 0.001 to about 10% by weight of the total
chewing gum'piece.
Warming components may be selected from a wide variety of compounds known to
provide the sensory signal of warming to the user. These compounds offer the perceived

sensation of warmth, particularly in the oral cavity, and often enhance the perception of
flavors, sweeteners and other organoleptic components. Among the useful warming
compounds included are vanillyl alcohol n-butylether (TK-1000) supplied by Takasago
Perfurnary Company Limited, Tokyo, Japan, vanillyl alcohol n-propylether, vanillyl alcohol
isopropylether, vanillyl alcohol isobutylether, vanillyl alcohol n-aminoether, vanillyl alcohol
isoamyleather, vanillyl alcohol n-hexyleather, vanillyl alcohol methylether, vanillyl alcohol
ethyleather, gingerol, shogaol, paradol, zingerone, capsaicin, dihydrocapsaicin,
nordihydrocapsaicin, homocapsaicin, homodihydrocapsaicin, ethanol, isopropol alcohol, iso-
amylalcohol, benzyl alcohol, glycerine, and combinations thereof.
The features and advantages of the present invention are more fully shown by the
following examples which are provided for purposes of illustration, and are not to be
construed as limiting the invention in any way.

EXAMPLES

Experimental
Chewing gum compositions A, B, C, D and E shown in Table 1 above and Table 2
below were prepared by conventional methods. Compositions A, B and C are comparative
compositions; and compositions D and E are compositions of the present invention. The
method of preparing the compositions involved heating a gum base sufficiently to soften the
base without adversely affecting the physical and chemical make-up of the base. The molten
gum base and fillers were then added to the mixing kettle. The sugar alcohols, glycerin,
flavor, sweeteners, chelating agent, abrasive and surfactant (sodium ricinoleate or sodium

stearate) were added with mixing to obtain a substantially homogeneous mixture, with the
surfactant component added last. The mixture was then discharged from the mixing kettle
and rolled and scored into a desired piece by conventional techniques.
To evaluate the whitening efficacy of Chewing Gums A, B, C, D and E, a mechanical
instrument, which was developed by Kleber et al.1 to simulate the human mastication of
chewing gum, was used. For testing, a specimen block with one enamel square was placed in
both the upper and lower tooth holders of the instrument. 15 ml of freshly prepared modified
artificial human saliva2 (no amino acid was added) was placed in the reservoir and
approximately 3 grams of the test chewing gum (i.e. 2 pellets) was placed between the
repositioning paddles directly over the lower tooth specimens. Then the mastication motor
was started and the chewing gums were chewed for 60 minutes.
Stained bovine teeth were prepared by Indiana-Purdue University. The average
L*a*b* color scores for the extrinsic stain on the teeth at baseline were well balanced for
each color factor before treatment. All bovine teeth used in this experiment had a value of
AE Squares of dental enamel 4 mm on a side were cut, using a diamond cutting disk, from
bovine permanent incisors. Using a mold, four of the enamel squares were embedded in clear
polyester casting resin to provide 1.5 cm square blocks with the labial surfaces exposed. The
top surface of the polyester blocks were ground flush with the leveled labial surfaces of the
enamel squares by means of a dental model trimmer. The surface was then smoothed by
hand-sanding on 400 grit emery paper using water as the lubricant until all grinding marks
were removed. Finally, the top surface of the blocks was hand-polished to a mirror finish
using a water slurry of GK1072 calcined kaolin (median particle size = 1.2 microns) on a
cotton cloth. The finished specimens were examined under a dissecting microscope and
discarded if surface imperfections were observed.
In order to render the polished tooth surfaces more similar to natural teeth and
promote the formation of stain on the enamel, the specimens were etched for 60 seconds in
1 Kleber CJ, Schimmele RG, Putt MS, Muhler Jc: A mastication device designed for the evaluation of chewing
gums. J. Dent Res 60:109-114,1981.
Shellis RP, 1978. A synthetic saliva for cultural studies of dental plaque. Arch. Oral Biol. 23,485-489.

0.2 M HC1 followed by a final etch with. 1% phytic acid for 60 seconds. Theii the specimens
were rinsed with deionized water and attached to the staining apparatus.
The tooth staining apparatus was designed to provide alternate immersion into the
staining broth and air-drying of the specimens. The apparatus consisted of an aluminum
platform base which supported a Teflon rod (3/4-inch in diameter) connected to an electric
motor, which by means of a speed reduction box, rotated the rod at a constant rate of 1.5 rpm.
Threaded screw holes were spaced at regular intervals along the length of the rod. The tooth
specimens were attached to the rod by first gluing the head of a plastic screw to the back of
the specimen, then screwing the tooth onto the rod. Beneath the rod was a removable 300 ml
capacity trough which held the tooth staining broth.
The staining broth was prepared by adding 1.02 g of instant coffee, 1.02 g of instant
tea, and 0.75 g of gastric mucin to 250 ml of sterilized trypticase soy broth. Approximately
50 ml of a 24-hour stain-promoting Micrococcus luteus culture was also added to the stain
broth. The apparatus, with the enamel specimens attached and the staining broth in the
trough, was then placed in an incubator at 37°C with the specimens rotating continuously
through the staining broth and air. The staining broth was replaced once every 24 hours for
ten consecutive days. With each broth change, the trough and specimens were rinsed and
tooth brushed with deionized water to remove any loose deposits. On the eleventh day, the
staining broth was modified by the addition of 0.03 g of FeCl3 6H2O, and this was continued
with daily broth changes until the stain on the specimens was sufficiently dark (L* Then, the specimens were removed from the staining broth, brushed thoroughly with
deionized water, and refrigerated in a humidor until used.
Procedures
In preparation for treatment, the baseline L*a*b* stain scores of the tooth specimens
were determined and used to stratify the teeth into balanced groups of 8 specimens each. A
mechanical instrument with a flow system to simulate the human mastication was used to
treat the tooth specimens with the test chewing gum. For testing, a specimen block with
enamel squares was placed in both the upper and lower tooth holders of the instrument.
An artificial saliva (pH 7.3) was placed in the reservoir. Approximately 1.5 grams of
test chewing gum (i.e. 2 tablets) was placed between the repositioning paddles directly over

the lower tooth specimen. Then the mastication motor was started and the two specimen
blocks with the enamel squares were treated with the chewing gums for 5 minutes. This
treatment procedure was repeated for 12 consecutive times (a total of 60 minutes of
treatment) in order to simulate 4 times/day usage for 3 days. Fresh gums and artificial saliva
were used for each 5-minute treatment period. Following the 12th treatments, the specimens
were rinsed, allowed to dry for 30 minutes, and color reading made. After the final stain
measurements, the specimens were pumiced using a dental hand piece in order to clean all
residual stain off of the teeth, then color readings were taken again. This final procedure
provided a value for each specimen that: represented the maximum amount of stain that
potentially could be removed by the test chewing gum or the saliva.
The color of the extrinsic stain on the bovine teeth was measured by taking diffuse
reflectance absorbance readings with a Minolta spectrophotometer. Absorbance
measurement over the entire visible color spectrum were obtained using the CIELAB color
scale. This scale quantifies color according to 3 parameters, L* (lightness-darkness scale); a*
(red-green chroma); and b* (yellow-blue chroma). In order to obtain reproducible readings,
, the stained enamel specimens were allowed to air-dry at room temperature for 60 minutes
before measurements were made. Measurements were conducted by aligning the center of
the 4 mm square segment of stained enamel directly over the 3 mm diameter targeting
aperture of the Minolta spectrophotometer. An average of 3 absorbance readings using the
L*a*b* scale were taken for each specimen.
The overall change in the color of the stained teeth was calculated using the CIELAB
equation AE = [(ΔL*)2 + (Δa*)2 + (Δb*)2]l/2. The individual components of the L*a*b* scale
represent the specific changes in the whiteness (L*), red-green color (a*), and yellow-blue
color (b*). The ΔE (i.e., dE) value for each composition tested is shown in Table 2 below,
and summarizes the overall change for each color factor (ΔL*, Δa*, and Δb*). This value
represents the ability of a test chewing gum to remove stain and whiten teeth, wherein the
greater the number, the better its ability to remove stains and whiten teeth.


As shown in Table 2, Inventive Compositions D and E were able to remove stains and
whiten teeth better than the comparative Compositions A, B and C.
Example 2 - Coated Chewing Gum Composition - Surfactant in the Coat

In the present example, the hydroxy fatty acid surfactant (sodium ricinoleate) is in the
coat. An inventive gum composition is prepared by conventional methods to form
Composition F in. Table 3. Briefly, a gum base is softened with heating. The molten gum
base and filler are added to the mixing kettle and mixing is commenced. The sugar alcohols,
glycerin, chelating agent (sodium tripolyhosphate), abrasive agent (silicon dioxide), flavors
and high intensity sweetener mixture, are added m portions to obtain a substantially

homogeneous mixture. The mixture is then discharged from the mixing kettle, and formed
into cores by conventional techniques.
The cores are placed into a coating pan and broken into individual pieces as
necessary. A sugarless solution containing 70% by weight of maltitol, as well as titanium
dioxide, gum arable and water is heated to between 70°C and 80°C. The solution is sprayed
onto the gum core pieces in layers and allowed to dry between sprays while the coating pan is
continually rotating to ensure a smooth even coat of the gum cores.
The coating is built up to about 8% by weight of the final pellet weight. Ace-K is
then added and men covered with another layer of the above-mentioned coating solution and
then allowed to dry.
After the high intensity sweetener layer is dried, sodium ricinoleate and a flavorant
are added in alternating layers until all of the respective materials are added with each layer
being allowed to dry before the next layer is applied. The coating process is continued with
the coating solution until the coat comprises 24% by weight of the final pellet weight. .
The coating is then topped with a conventional finishing solution until a shell weight
of 25% by weight is obtained. The pellets are then polished in a polishing pan with candelilla
wax in a conventional manner.

Example 3 - Coated Chewing Gum Composition - Abrasive in the Coat

In the present example, the abrasive agent is present in the coat. An inventive gum
composition is prepared by conventional methods to form Composition G in Table 4.
Briefly, a gum base is softened with heating. The molten gum base and filler are added to the
mixing kettle and mixing is commenced. The sugar alcohols, glycerin, chelating agent
(sodium tripolyphosphate), surfactant (hydroxy fatty acid salt), flavors and high intensity
sweetener mixture are added in portions to obtain a substantially homogeneous mixture. The
mixture is then discharged from the mixing kettle, and formed into cores by conventional
techniques.
The cores are placed into a coating pan and broken into individual pieces as
necessary. A sugarless solution containing 70% by weight of maltitol, as well as titanium
dioxide, gum arabic and water is heated to between 70°C and 80°C. The solution is sprayed
onto the gum core pieces in layers and allowed to dry between sprays while the coating pan is
continually rotating to ensure a smooth even coat of the gum cores.

The coating is built up to about 8% by weight of the final pellet weight. Ace-K is
then added and then covered with another layer of the above-mentioned coating solution and
then allowed to dry.
After the high intensity sweetener layer is dried, the abrasive agent (silicon dioxide)
and a flavorant are added in alternating layers until all of the respective materials are added
with each layer being allowed to dry before the next layer is applied. The coating process is
continued with the coating solution until the coat comprises 24% by weight of the final pellet
weight.
The coating is then topped with a conventional finishing solution until a shell weight
of 25% by weight, is obtained. The pellets are then polished in a polishing pan with candelilla
wax in a conventional manner.
Example 4 - Pressed Mint Products
A composition for forming a pressed mint product in accordance with the present
invention is prepared in the following manner.
Sorbitol at 97.0% by weight, 0.5% by weight of silicon dioxide, 0.5% of sodium
tripolyphosphate, 0.3% by weight of a flavoring agent, and 0.7% of Aspartame are mixed for
two minutes in a blender until a substantially homogeneous mixture is obtained. Sodium
ricinoleate is then added to the mixture at 0.5% by weight, followed by blending for about
four minutes.- Magnesium Stearate is then added to the mixture at 0.5% by weight, followed
by blending for about three minutes. The resulting mixture is then formed into individual
pressed tablets in a conventional manner.
Example 5 - Dentifrice Composition of the Present Invention
In some embodiments, a dentifrice composition of the present invention contains the
following ingredients, as described below in Table 5.


The jacket temperature of a mixing tank is set to about 150°F (65°C). The
humectants (glycerine, sorbitol, PEG) and water are added to the mixing tank and agitation is
started. When the temperature reaches about 120°F (50°C), sweetening agents (saccharin),
fluoride, chelant (sodium tripolyphosphate), coloring agents (titanium dioxide) and sodium
benzoate are added. Thickening agents (carboxymethyl cellulose) are added to the silica
abrasive and the resulting mixture is added to the mixing tank with high agitation. The
surfactant (sodium ricinoleate) is added to the combination and mixing is continued. The
tank is cooled to 120°F (50°C) and the flavoring agents are added. Mixing is continued for
approximately 5 minutes to yield the final composition.

WE CLAIM :
1. A stain-removing oral composition comprising: a gum base; and a surfactant in an effective
amount to remove stains from teeth, wherein the surfactant comprises a free fatty acid salt having at
least one hydroxyl functionality, said free hydroxy fatty acid salt having a greater solubility in saliva
and less of an affinity for the gum base relative to other fatty acid salts comprising stearic acid and
salts thereof, thereby providing an enhanced stain-removing activity relative to said other fatty acid
salts; wherein said free fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl functionality is a salt of ricinoleic
acid.
2. The composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the surfactant is present in amounts of 0.001
to 20% by weight of the oral composition.
3. The composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the surfactant is present in amounts of 0.05
to 10% by weight of the oral composition.
4. The composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the surfactant is present in amounts of 0.05
to 2% by weight of the oral composition.
5. The composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the free hydroxyl fatty acid salt has a metal
ion selected from the group consisting of divalent metal ions and monovalent metal ions.
6. The composition as claimed in claim 5, wherein the metal ion is selected from the group
consisting of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and combinations thereof.
7. The composition as claimed in claim 1, comprising a chelating agent.
8. The composition as claimed in claim 7, wherein the chelating agent is a phosphate salt
selected from the group consisting of pyrophosphates, triphosphates, polyphosphates,
polyphosphonates and combinations thereof.

9. The composition as claimed in claim 7, wherein the chelating agent is selected from the group
consisting of dialkali metal pyrophosphate salts, tetraalkali polyphosphate salts and combinations
thereof.
10. The composition as claimed in claim 7, wherein the chelating agent is selected from the group
consisting of tetrasodium pyrophosphate, tetrapotassium pyrophosphate, sodium tripolyphosphate and
combinations thereof.
11. The composition as claimed in claim 7, wherein the chelating agent is present in amounts of
0.001 to 5% by weight of the oral composition.
12. The composition as claimed in claim 7, wherein the chelating agent is present in amounts of
0.5 to 3% by weight of the oral composition.
13. The composition as claimed in claim 1, comprising an abrasive agent.
14. The composition as claimed in claim 13, wherein the abrasive agent is selected from the group
consisting of silicas, aluminas, phosphates, carbonates and combinations thereof.
15. The composition as claimed in claim 13, wherein said abrasive agent is a silica selected from
the group consisting of precipitated silica, silica gels and combinations thereof.
16. The composition as claimed in claim 13, wherein the abrasive agent is selected from the group
consisting of calcium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium metaphosphate, potassium
metaphosphate, tricalcium phosphate, dihydrated dicalcium phosphate and combinations thereof.
17. The composition as claimed in claim 13, wherein the abrasive agent is present in amounts
from 0.1 to 30% by weight of the oral composition.
18. The composition as claimed in claim 13, wherein the abrasive agent is present in amounts
from 0.5 to 5% by weight of the oral composition.

19. The composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the composition comprises a chewing gum
base in amounts of 20 to 40% by weight of the composition.
20. The composition as claimed in claim 1, comprising an agent selected from the group
consisting of elastomers, elastomer solvents, waxes, emulsifiers, plasticizers, softeners, dispersing
agents, sweeteners, flavorants, humectants, active agents, cooling agents, warming agents, tooth
whitening agents, colorants, bulking agents, fillers and combinations thereof.
21. The composition as claimed in claim 20, wherein the agent is a fluoride compound or an
antibacterial compound.
22. The composition as claimed in claim 1, comprising a film-forming polymer.
23. The composition as claimed in claim 22, wherein the film-forming polymer is an anionic
polymeric polycarboxylate.
24. The composition as claimed in claim 1, comprising a component selected from the group
consisting of sulfated butyl oleate, medium and long chain fatty acid esters, sodium oleate, salts of
fumaric acid, potassium glomate, organic acid esters of mono- and diglycerides, stearyl
monoglyceridyl citrate, succistearin, dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate, glycerol tristearate, lecithin,
hydroxylated lecithin, sodium lauryl sulfate, acetylated monoglycerides, succinylated monoglycerides,
monoglyceride citrate, ethoxylated mono- and diglycerides, sorbitan monostearate, calcium stearyl-2-
lactylate, sodium stearyl lactylate, lactylated fatty acid esters of glycerol and propylene glycerol,
glycerol-lactoesters of C8-C24 fatty acids, polyglycerol esters of Cg-C24 fatty acids, propylene glycol
alginate, sucrose C8-C24 fatty acid esters, diacetyl tartaric and citric acid esters of mono- and
diglycerides, triacetin, sarcosinate surfactants, isethionate surfactants, tautate surfactants, pluronics,
polyethylene oxide condensates of alkyl phenols, products derived from the condensation of ethylene
oxide with the reaction product of propylene oxide and ethylene diamine, ethylene oxide condensates
of aliphatic alcohols, long chain tertiary amine oxides, long chain tertiary phosphine oxides, long
chain dialkyl sulfoxides and mixtures thereof.

25 A stain-removing chewing gum composition comprising: (a) a free water-soluble salt of
ricinoleic acid, said free salt of ricinoleic acid having a greater solubility in saliva and less of an
affinity for the gum base relative to stearic acid and salts thereof, thereby providing an enhanced
stain-removing activity relative thereto; and (b) a chelating agent.
26. The composition as claimed in claim 25, wherein the salt of ricinoleic acid is present in
amounts of 0.001 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
27. The composition as claimed in claim 25, wherein the salt of ricinoleic acid is present in
amounts of 0.05 to 10% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
28. The composition as claimed in claim 25, wherein the chelating agent is selected from the
group consisting of dialkali metal pyrophosphate salts, tetraalkali polyphosphate salts and
combinations thereof.
29. The composition as claimed in claim 25, wherein the chelating agent is present in amounts of
0.001 to 5% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
30. The composition as claimed in claim 25, comprising an abrasive agent selected from the
group consisting of precipitated silica, silica gels and combinations thereof.
31. The composition as claimed in claim 30, wherein the abrasive agent is present in amounts of
0.1 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
32. A stain-removing chewing gum composition comprising: a gum base; and a free water-soluble
salt of ricinoleic acid, said free salt of ricinoleic acid having a greater solubility in saliva and less of
an affinity for the gum base relative to stearic acid and salts thereof, thereby providing an enhanced
stain-removing activity relative thereto.
33. The composition as claimed in claim 32, wherein the gum base is present in amounts of 20 to
40% by weight of the chewing gum composition.

34. The composition as claimed in claim 32, wherein the salt of ricinoleic acid is present in
amounts of 0.001 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
35. The composition as claimed in claim 32, comprising a chelating agent selected from the group
consisting of dialkali metal pyrophosphate salts, tetraalkali polyphosphate salts and combinations
thereof.
36. The composition as claimed in claim 35, wherein the chelating agent is present in amounts of
0.001 to 5% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
37. The composition as claimed in claim 32, comprising an abrasive agent selected from the
group consisting of precipitated silica, silica gels and combinations thereof.
38. The composition as claimed in claim 37, wherein the abrasive agent is present in amounts of
0.1 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
39. A stain-removing chewing gum composition comprising: a gum base; a free water-soluble salt
of ricinoleic acid, said free salt of ricinoleic acid having a greater solubility in saliva and less of an
affinity for the gum base relative to stearic acid and salts thereof, thereby providing an enhanced
stain-removing activity relative thereto; a chelating agent; and at least one elastomer.
40. The composition as claimed in claim 39, wherein the gum base is present in amounts of 20 to
40% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
41. The composition as claimed in claim 39, wherein the salt of ricinoleic acid is present in
amounts of 0.001 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
42. The composition as claimed in claim 39, wherein the chelating agent is selected from the
group consisting of dialkali metal pyrophosphate salts, tetraalkali polyphosphate salts and
combinations thereof.

43. The composition as claimed in claim 39, wherein the chelating agent is present in amounts of
0.001 to 5% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
44. The composition as claimed in claim 39, comprising an abrasive agent selected from the
group consisting of precipitated silica, silica gels and combinations thereof.
45. The composition as claimed in claim 39, wherein the abrasive agent is present in amounts of
0.1 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
46. A stain-removing chewing gum composition comprising: a gum base; a free water-soluble salt
of ricinoleic acid, said free salt of ricinoleic acid having a greater solubility in saliva and less of an
affinity for the gum base relative to stearic acid and salts thereof, thereby providing an enhanced
stain-removing activity relative thereto; a chelating agent; and an abrasive agent.
47. The composition as claimed in claim 46, wherein the gum base is present in amounts of 20 to
40% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
48. The composition as claimed in claim 46, wherein the salt of ricinoleic acid is present in
amounts of 0.001 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
49. The composition as claimed in claim 46, wherein the chelating agent is selected from the
group consisting of dialkali metal pyrophosphate salts, tetraalkali polyphosphate salts and
combinations thereof.
50. The composition as claimed in claim 46, wherein the chelating agent is present in amounts of
0.001 to 5% by weight of the chewing gum composition.
51. The composition as claimed in claim 46, wherein the abrasive agent is selected from the group
consisting of precipitated silica, silica gels and combinations thereof.
52. The composition as claimed in claim 46, wherein the abrasive agent is present in amounts of
0.1 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition.

53. A stain-removing chewing gum composition comprising: a gum base present in amounts of 20
to 40% by weight of the chewing gum composition; sodium ricinoleate present in amounts of 0.05 to
10% by weight of the chewing gum composition, said sodium ricinoleate having a greater solubility
in saliva and less of an affinity for the gum base relative to stearic acid and salts thereof, thereby
providing an enhanced stain-removing activity relative thereto; silicon dioxide present in amounts of
0.1 to 20% by weight of the chewing gum composition; and sodium tripolyphosphate present in
amounts of 0.1 to 5% by weight of the chewing gum composition.


Stain-removing oral compositions, such as gum compositions are herein provided. The compositions include an
orally acceptable carrier and a stain-removing anionic surfactant. The surfactant includes a fatty acid salt having at least one hydroxyl
functionality. The fatty acid salt may be a salt of ricinoleic acid, and may be combined with a chelating agent and/or an abrasive.
The chelating agent may be a polyphosphate and the abrasive may be a silica abrasive.

Documents:

00594-kolnp-2007 assignment.pdf

00594-kolnp-2007 correspondence-1.1.pdf

00594-kolnp-2007 priority document.pdf

00594-kolnp-2007-form-3-1.1.pdf

00594-kolnp-2007-g.p.a.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 abstract.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 claims.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 correspondence others.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 description (complete).pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 form-1.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 form-13.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 form-3.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 form-5.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 international publication.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 international search report.pdf

0594-kolnp-2007 others.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-(16-08-2012)-ASSIGNMENT-1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-(16-08-2012)-CORRESPONDENCE-1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-(16-08-2012)-FORM-16-2.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-(16-08-2012)-FORM-16-3.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-(16-08-2012)-OTHERS.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-(16-08-2012)-PA-CERTIFIED COPIES-1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-ABSTRACT 1.1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-AMANDED CLAIMS.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-ASSIGNMENT.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE) 1.1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 1-1.1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 13-1.1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 13-1.2.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 18-1.1.pdf

594-kolnp-2007-form 18.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 2.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 3-1.1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 3-1.2.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-FORM 5.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-GPA.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-ABSTRACT.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-CLAIMS.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-FORM 1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-FORM 2.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-SPECIFICATION.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-OTHERS 1.1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-OTHERS-1.2.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-PETITION UNDER RULE 137.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT-1.1.pdf

594-KOLNP-2007-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT.pdf


Patent Number 251961
Indian Patent Application Number 594/KOLNP/2007
PG Journal Number 16/2012
Publication Date 20-Apr-2012
Grant Date 18-Apr-2012
Date of Filing 16-Feb-2007
Name of Patentee CADBURY ADAMS USA LLC.
Applicant Address 389 INTERFACE PARKWAY, PARSIPPANY, NJ 07054
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 GEBRESELASSIE PETROS 110 A PLEASANT VIEW DRIVE, PISCATAWAY, NJ 08854
2 BOGHANI NAVROZ 74 OAKWOOD VILLAGE, APT.#11, FLANDERS, NJ 07836,
PCT International Classification Number A61K 7/16
PCT International Application Number PCT/US2005/007950
PCT International Filing date 2005-03-14
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10/901,511 2004-07-29 U.S.A.