
I'd need a lot of prayers, and a bottle of gin to fortify myself before I would try sticking a toothbrush in a cat's mouth. I only have one good hand, and I like the fingers on it.
Raw meat is what cats should be eating, since they're obligate carnivores, but as for myself, the slaughterhouse industry scares me...so much bacteria getting slung around in the huge commercial enterprises. I hate even handling raw chicken.But those who process raw specifically for carnivores like cats, are supposed to be
extra special specialists in keeping that to a minimum, as their customers actually eat their food raw. Are you buying fresh or getting it from a Raw Supplier?
I do know that there's a balance of bone and marrow that should be fed in proportion to meat, so nutrients don'g get lopsided....but as to the proportions.... I do feed a little raw, but I cheat, and just started using Stella & Chewy's freeze-dried raw turkey, and the bone/marrow balance is already pre-added to the mixture. It looks a wee bit different when reconstituted, than from the store raw..so it gets past my" heebie jeebies",

too....Both cats appear to like it.
Found a site that proposes raw is actually better for cats' mouths and that together they cancel at least some of the bacteria out...just a brief statement, but here's the
whole page if you want to read it.
The excerpt is below:
"Raw chunked meat helps at least somewhat with dental health. Meat scraping across a cat's teeth as they tear at it will help remove most debris. Small cats, such as our domestic cat, do not chew large bones, (such as chicken bones) as proponents of whole prey feeding purport. Small prey such as mice, rats, small birds, insects, snakes, and lizards are eaten whole or with only one or two bites and these prey generally have small bones.
The acidic aspect of meat inhibits the growth of bacteria. Cats also have an enzyme, lysozyme , in their saliva which attacks bacteria as it enters the mouth by digesting the coating on it, thereby killing it"

So perhaps the interaction of acid in the raw food combined with the cat's saliva creates a balance that we'd only hope to get with a mouthwash? Perhaps you don't need any added help?
There's a few raw feeders on the board. I hope they'll weigh in on this. I'm curious too.