Re: Jerry - Dental Cavitation Bacteria

Bradley Scott ( brad@saltbush.une.edu.au )
Wed, 29 Jul 1998 14:51:56 +1000

At 10:28 PM 28/7/98 -0500, you wrote:
>Hi Don!
>
>You know how you read some things and they don't really hit you? A
>friend was telling me about the dental cavitation material and I was
>amazed because I know all the misery he's suffered from his Meuniers
>disease...one treatment to kill the bacteria in his mouth and he hasn't
>had a bout of Meuniers since...but he is still taking the treatment
>until all of it is gone...amazing that these bacteria can just hide in
>these grown over skin pockets, festering in your mouth and secreting
>their toxins and waste products into the blood...Paul said these
>byproducts are major causes of low-level chronic illnesses..amazing..

Hi Jerry,

I have heard of work done with root canal teeth. You should avoid having
this done if possible. The bateria in the teeth turn anaerobic because
they are starved of oxygen, and release toxic substances into your mouth
and throat. One study, reportedly, claims to have inserted a human tooth
under the skin of a rabbit. That rabbit live happily ever after. They
then took a human root canal tooth and inserted it under the skin of
another rabbit; that rabbit died within 3 weeks. They took the tooth out
and inserted it into another rabbit; it dies within 3 weeks. They kill
over 100 rabbits with the same tooth. People who have root canals are
highly likely to suffer from some sort of disease on a regular basis. My
wife had one done one and half years ago. Since then, she has had 8
serious cases of toncelitous (pardon the spelling, I don't have dictionary
handy). She wants to have her toncils out, but I'd prefer to have the
tooth out and see what happens then.

Cheers,

Brad

Dr Bradley W. Scott
Saltbush Software
Agricultural Business Research Institute
University of New England, NSW
Australia, 2350.

Ph: +61 2 6773 5252
email: brad@saltbush.une.edu.au

Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more
complex and more violent. It takes a touch of genius
and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction.

-- Albert Einstein