The Blizzident toothbrush is like filling up your entire mouth with teeth-cleaning bristles. Users "bite and grind" to properly clean those pearly whites, and it only takes six seconds.
The recommended duration for one teeth-brushing session is two to three minutes, but this giant brush could cut down that time to only a percentage.
The $299 toothbrush fits to the entire mouth so the bristles are touching every single tooth. It employs the "Modified Bass" and "Fones" techniques, which is recommended by dentists.
"Blizzident" is tailor-made from a 3D model of the customer's teeth, so the bristles are able to clean every nook and cranny. One they get their fit-to mouth brush they can stary biting down on the unique decvice.
"This creates the little vibrating / jiggling upwards/downwards / slightly circling movements of the "Bass"-technique," the company website stated.
The Modified Bass technique works to clean every surface of the teeth and below the gum line, but is extremely difficult to accomplish by hand.
Blizzident users are then asked to grind their teeth from side to side, which accomplishes the "Fones" technique to clean the tops of the molars.
Opening the mouth while "wearing" the toothbrush allows additional grime to be removed with the "wipeout" technique.
"Blizzident bristle pressure is always the same, and within the correct limits. Whereas, when you brush by hand, often too much pressure is applied, and gums and teeth are harmed. And if not enough pressure is applied, the cleaning effect is reduced," the website stated.
The device also comes with holes that dental floss can be threaded through, which would allow users to floss while brushing. Blizzident's handle also works as a dental floss dispenser for easy access. The giant brush even comes with a built-in tongue scraper.
"The positions of the "floss-holes" provide a move-stop and thus guarantee that floss can only be applied with correct, limited pressures, in the right places (whereas, when flossing by hand, often gums are harmed by applying too much force, and in the wrong places - especially in the more difficult-to-reach places of the teeth)," the website stated.
WATCH: