Guest guest Posted May 5, 2007 Report Share Posted May 5, 2007 Bent I had the same thing. I had a root canaled tooth removed last June and afterwards I was on the couch for 4 days just totally wiped out. I did have an amalgam tattoo - it is when you have a bluish / black mark on the gumline from where the mercury leaked into the gum. My dentist cut it out. When he removed the tooth there was a black sludge under the tooth and the jaw had some necrosis. He ground the bone down and flushed it with iodine. I had SSKI to wash my mouth with to help it heal as well. I took large doses of Vit C (5,000 - 6,000 mgs) per day to help my body recover. I have heard it is normal to feel worse for a time after removal. I started Chelation 2 weeks after removing my amalgams and that made me feel better. Hi! I got one of my tooth extracted a week ago, but today it taste like mercury when I stick my tongue in the whole where the tooth was? Can it be any mercury under the tooth? Is this what yo calll an amalgam tattoo? What can I do about this? I am very sick after extracting the tooth and the symptoms are quite the same as I got from mercury redistribuation. Please help mee. Bent Bent Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2007 Report Share Posted May 5, 2007 >Hi! >I got one of my tooth extracted a week ago, but today it taste like >mercury when I stick my tongue in the whole where the tooth was? >Can it be any mercury under the tooth? Is this what yo calll an >amalgam tattoo? >What can I do about this? I am very sick after extracting the tooth >and the symptoms are quite the same as I got from mercury >redistribuation. Please help mee. >Bent You should get a PANORAMIC x-ray to check for tattoo's. This is an x-ray of your whole mouth that can view everything. A mercury tattoo is 'piece' of mercury that got caught up in the gums. The x-ray will show it up. Some root canal teeth have had the apex of the tooth filled with mercury. This is called an apicectomy. This means the tip of the canal is filled with mercury before the shove gutta percha over it. All root canals are infected to a greater or lesser degree, and this infection has often spread though to the surrounding bone. You will have detoxification after an extraction and will cause redistribution due to the increase in blood supply in that area. It is important to see a dentist that knows what he is doing. Most biological dentists are safe, but of course you can almost never trust what a dentist tells you and a proper referral to the right dentist is always best. I would advice you get some Vitamin C IV drips - they should have done this anyway at the time. Don't let them put anything else in the IV. Also, if the dental ligaments were not scraped clean and you were not told to avoid food after you could have a low grade infection. Most people I knew felt better after root canal removal, so I'm not sure we have all the info here. Dentistry is stressful and your adrenals might be shot and not be coping properly with the experience. Hydrocortisone will help. If you can't get your doctor to prescribe it get hold of Hydrocortisone cream (1%-2%) and use a tablespoon once a day on your skin making SURE YOU ROTATE the site of application everyday. This is proved very helpful for many know so far. Haven't had the courage to advise anyone to swallow it yet as Andy suggests :-) Dean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2007 Report Share Posted May 5, 2007 Thanks a lot for a great answer. But I wonder, can a " normal " dentist remove a tattoo, eventually, what does the dentist? Will he cut away a bit of the gum with scalpell or what? Can I be sicker afterwards? How black is the mark in the gum. My gum is a little bit black but not much. Bent > >Bent I had the same thing. I had a root canaled tooth removed last June >and afterwards I was on the couch for 4 days just totally wiped out. I did >have an amalgam tattoo - it is when you have a bluish / black mark on the >gumline from where the mercury leaked into the gum. My dentist cut it out. > When he removed the tooth there was a black sludge under the tooth and >the jaw had some necrosis. He ground the bone down and flushed it with >iodine. I had SSKI to wash my mouth with to help it heal as well. I took >large doses of Vit C (5,000 - 6,000 mgs) per day to help my body recover. >I have heard it is normal to feel worse for a time after removal. I >started Chelation 2 weeks after removing my amalgams and that made me feel >better. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2007 Report Share Posted May 5, 2007 So when my dentist look at an regular x-ray and tell mee that its no mercury left, I can trust him? > > >You should get a PANORAMIC x-ray to check for tattoo's. >This is an x-ray of your whole mouth that can view everything. >A mercury tattoo is 'piece' of mercury that got caught up in the gums. >The x-ray will show it up. >Some root canal teeth have had the apex of the tooth filled with mercury. >This is called an apicectomy. >This means the tip of the canal is filled with mercury before the shove >gutta percha over it. >All root canals are infected to a greater or lesser degree, and this >infection has often spread though to the surrounding bone. You will have >detoxification after an extraction and will cause redistribution due to the >increase in blood supply in that area. >It is important to see a dentist that knows what he is doing. Most >biological dentists are safe, but of course you can almost never trust what >a dentist tells you and a proper referral to the right dentist is always >best. >I would advice you get some Vitamin C IV drips - they should have done this >anyway at the time. Don't let them put anything else in the IV. >Also, if the dental ligaments were not scraped clean and you were not told >to avoid food after you could have a low grade infection. >Most people I knew felt better after root canal removal, so I'm not sure we >have all the info here. >Dentistry is stressful and your adrenals might be shot and not be coping >properly with the experience. >Hydrocortisone will help. If you can't get your doctor to prescribe it get >hold of Hydrocortisone cream (1%-2%) and use a tablespoon once a day on >your skin making SURE YOU ROTATE the site of application everyday. This is >proved very helpful for many know so far. Haven't had the courage to advise >anyone to swallow it yet as Andy suggests :-) >Dean > > > > _________________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2007 Report Share Posted May 5, 2007 >So when my dentist look at an regular x-ray and tell mee that its no mercury >left, I can trust him? It takes a lot for me to trust anything that comes out of a dentists mouth now after having been lied to so often by them. Cross check everything they say - twice. A regular x-ray of a single tooth will tell you if there is mercury there. He shouldn't be able to get that wrong. But ask the dentist for your all YOUR x-rays and keep them on file. If you have metal crowns there could be mercury underneath them. Dentists are famous for saying not to worry, " I'm sure there is no mercury under there. " Have a look at Hair test number 10. There is a PANORAMIC x-ray there for you to view. It is most helpful to have one of these done. The point of having it done is to get a complete overview of what dentistry is and is not there. Cavitations can never be ruled out by any x-ray, though some do appear quite obviously. The cavitat scan has proved accurate in my experience so far. But is only necessary in cases where you have many extractions, otherwise we just go into each extraction site if their are about 8 or less. I have also found the research by Huggins to be clinically accurate that says 95% of extracted wisdoms will form cavitations. I must have had 400 cavitations by now cleaned of patients of mine and in almost every case there was a cavitation in the previous wisdom site. One can still debate about the systemic toxicity of them and what they were actually doing to the person's immune system, but there is no more argument about them being there for me. Most were filled with 'air', soft spongy and fatty tissue, some with foul smelling 'stuff' and others with greenish puss. I have found it fruitless to try and convince a dentist of anything they aren't ready or willing to believe. Rather find one that is already convinced and can take care of you properly. Then make sure you DON'T listen to anything they say about chelation. Only Andy Cutler's work is to be used in that department. Dean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2007 Report Share Posted May 6, 2007 DAMS have list of qualified dentist all over N.America. There is machine more advanced than CAVITAT SCAN for caviitations, known as TOMOGRAPHIC ?. Dr. ASTRABILLO in Ancaster , ontario canada have this machine, it gives three dimensional picture of your teeth in 40-50 pictures which will confirm whether someone has cavitation or not. Their are very few dentist who knows how to read Panaromic x-ray. I have to spend lot of time and money before I came to this conclusion. Dr. Oksana Sawaik in Toronto, Canada knows what she is doing and one the best. Nadeem Khan > >Reply-To: frequent-dose-chelation >To: frequent-dose-chelation > >Subject: Re: tooth-extracted >Date: Sat, 5 May 2007 22:27:09 +0200 > > >So when my dentist look at an regular x-ray and tell mee that its no >mercury > >left, I can trust him? > >It takes a lot for me to trust anything that comes out of a dentists mouth >now after having been lied to so often by them. Cross check everything they >say - twice. A regular x-ray of a single tooth will tell you if there is >mercury there. He shouldn't be able to get that wrong. But ask the dentist >for your all YOUR x-rays and keep them on file. >If you have metal crowns there could be mercury underneath them. Dentists >are famous for saying not to worry, " I'm sure there is no mercury under >there. " > >Have a look at Hair test number 10. There is a PANORAMIC x-ray there for >you to view. >It is most helpful to have one of these done. >The point of having it done is to get a complete overview of what dentistry >is and is not there. > >Cavitations can never be ruled out by any x-ray, though some do appear >quite obviously. >The cavitat scan has proved accurate in my experience so far. But is only >necessary in cases where you have many extractions, otherwise we just go >into each extraction site if their are about 8 or less. >I have also found the research by Huggins to be clinically accurate that >says 95% of extracted wisdoms will form cavitations. I must have had 400 >cavitations by now cleaned of patients of mine and in almost every case >there was a cavitation in the previous wisdom site. One can still debate >about the systemic toxicity of them and what they were actually doing to >the person's immune system, but there is no more argument about them being >there for me. Most were filled with 'air', soft spongy and fatty tissue, >some with foul smelling 'stuff' and others with greenish puss. > >I have found it fruitless to try and convince a dentist of anything they >aren't ready or willing to believe. >Rather find one that is already convinced and can take care of you >properly. >Then make sure you DON'T listen to anything they say about chelation. >Only Andy Cutler's work is to be used in that department. >Dean > > > _________________________________________________________________ Get the Kung Fu Bunny Theme pack free! http://www.imagine-windowslive.com/Themes/Messenger/Reward/Default.aspx?Locale=e\ n-CA# Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2007 Report Share Posted May 7, 2007 > > >So when my dentist look at an regular x-ray and tell mee that its no mercury > >left, I can trust him? > > It takes a lot for me to trust anything that comes out of a dentists mouth now after having been lied to so often by them. Cross check everything they say - twice. Similarly with doctors. Yes, it is unfair to the good ones to subject them to this because they have some irresponsible colleagues, but you don't know who is who and it is your life and your health... so do it anyway and don't feel bad about it. The good ones may get frustrated, but they will understand that you have to do it this way and will feel an ethical need to put up with it. Andy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2007 Report Share Posted May 7, 2007 So when my dentist look at an regular x-ray and tell mee that its no mercury > > >left, I can trust him? > > > > It takes a lot for me to trust anything that comes out of a dentists mouth now after > having been lied to so often by them. Cross check everything they say - twice. > > Similarly with doctors. ---------------------- YES!!! Before I went broke, I had no less than 4 mercury free dentists checking out my mouth. The first one did such a sloppy job taking out a quadrant that he left a couple chunks of mercury/metal in my mouth. And this guy was a professor at a Naturopathic college and was part of a well-known holistic clinic. Then I went to another dentist who was good but ridiculously expensive - he noticed right away that the previous dentist had left some mercury in my mouth. Then went to another VERY PROMINENT, OFTEN QUOTED AND FREQUENTLY TESTIFIES ON CAPITOL HILL REGARDING MERCURY ISSUES,BUDDY OF BOYD HALEY dentist who when examining my mouth did NOT notice the mercury left in by the previous dentist. Finally went to a Huggins clinic in Montreal where they were aghast at the crappy job done on the 1st quadrant and just used a long mirror to show me how obvious it was -- I could see it without xrays it was that poor a job. Long story short, I got a complete dental revision done in Montreal (that's another horror story). They gave me the xrays showing mercury left in by 1st dentist. They even circled the areas for me. I took xrays back to original crappy dentist and he had his " business manager " reimburse me 3/4 of the bill and apologize for him. The crappy dentist couldn't even face me. So yeah, check and double check and then say your prayers. VAl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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