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Tips for Sparkling White Teeth
There's more to keeping you pearly whites precisely that than a bit of brushing and the odd visit to a dentist. Take a look at these dental dos and don'ts. #1 Avoid Fizzy Drinks Carbonated drinks (including the diet variety and...

The numerous benefits of dental care
Copyright 2006 Jason Bibb Dental surgery Almost everyone I know is scared of going to the dentist. What most of us don't understand is that dentistry is not that painful when you are under the effect of an anesthetic. Dental surgery...

Cosmetic Surgery – A Review Of Facial Surgery, With Personal Experiences.
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Cosmetic Dentistry: Part 3
Bridges. Sometimes permanent teeth need to be replaced. Teeth can be lost through dental decay, knocked out in accidents or, in some rare cases, never grow in the first place. When this occurs a cosmetic process is used to fill...

Brushing With Cranberries? Maybe Later
Many of us remember the time from around last November when a flurry of reports citing Tel Aviv University and the University of Rochester suggested we might be brushing with cranberries soon. The University of Rochester tested the effect of...

 
How does The Amount of Dental Infections Influence the Severity of Disease?

"Infected teeth may contain, in additon to microorganisms, toxic substances which produce very profound effects upon experimental animals and which tend to prepare the tissues of the host, at least in some cases, for a more ready invasion by the organisms growing in that tooth."

We are all aware that organisms which produce disease vary greatly in the amount and severity of their virulence. Because teeth are relatively small, it is also generally believed that when a tooth has a properly treated root canal filling, it is impossible for an infection there from to overwhelm the patient. Furthermore, many express the opinion that the organisms which cause dental infections are low in virulence and the occurrence of any systemic involvement is unlikely or, at best, of minor significance.
One of the first of numerous experiments by Dr.
Price was to withdraw the moisture content of an extracted tooth in a drying chamber. Measuring the amount of dehydration showed that roughly five percent of the volume of every root filled tooth is a fluid which can quite readily become a culture medium that can become easily saturated with abundant bacteria.
In another experiment, a root filled tooth was taken from a patient suffering acute endocarditis. The tooth was crushed and the particles washed.
The settled wash liquid was then injected into a rabbit. The weight of the organisms injected was determined by counting the number present in the dilution; the actual amount the rabbit received was only a millionth part of a gram. Still, the rabbit became seriously ill with endocarditis. With such a small amount of bacteria involved, the question arose as to whether something more than the bacteria could be the causative agent.
To answer this question, the same crushing and washing of extracted root-filled teeth was undertaken, but the liquid was centrifuged, thereby removing the bacteria. Now the one cubic centimeter remaining of bacteria free water-like appearing liquid was injected into rabbits and they too developed heart lesions, even more severely than did rabbits injected with bacteria cultures alone.
In view of the fact it was believed the only injurious substance in infected teeth were bacteria, Price concluded that: "Infected teeth may contain, in additon to microorganisms, toxic substances which produce very profound effects upon experimental animals and which tend to prepare the tissues of the host, at least in some cases, for a more ready invasion by the organisms growing in that tooth." He found that by extracting infected teeth, crushing them, and then washing the powder, bacteria could still be found in the liquid. When he put the liquid in a centrifuge, the centrifugal force spun off the bacteria and sediment, leaving a clear liquid. When Dr. Price injected a small amount of this clear liquid into a rabbit, it lost 25 percent of its weight in four weeks and it died in the fifth week. Its brother rabbit, used as the control animal and not injectedFree Reprint Articles, continued to thrive and gain weight.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. George Meinig,D.D.S.,F.A.C.D. is a Founder of the Association of Root Canal Specialists Discovers Evidence That Root Canals Damage Your Health Learn What to Do.Learn how Dr. George Meinig discovered that a meticulous 25 year research program, conducted by Weston A. Price, DDS, under the auspices of the American Dental Association's Research Institute was buried.To subscribe newsletter:Visit:http://www.1stultimategumsolution.comEdited and prepared by Sung Lee, alternate author