Guest guest Posted March 17, 2008 Report Share Posted March 17, 2008 You should not be doing cleanses if you are full of Hg. This is very stressing on an already stressed liver. And there is no such thing as " being clean enough to do a removal " . Taking some sensible vitamins and minerals is a good idea but your body really cannot benefit from cleansing and detoxing when there is constant mercury pouring out of your teeth. Removal will not produce a lot of vapor and poisons if you have it done right by a competent person trained to do so (Huggins Dentists do well with this). (www.iaomt.org) I had 14 removed myself at one time. I did not suffer for it. I did not get sicker from it. I had improvements that very day, only a few hours after removal. I still am improving almost 2 years later. The dentist who removed them save my life.... There is no need to remove the teeth themselves unless you don't have the money to have the amalgam taken out safely. Most dentist won't do this anyway. If your anywhere near PA, email me for my dentists name/location. PS: I also had some very large amalgams, with more than one filling on a tooth. I was able to keep those teeth. Even if you pull the teeth, your still going to go through mercury dumping and need chelation..all the while having to deal with trying to heal up your extractions..which can be a problem when your toxic. Healing is not that easy and there can be problems. Then you still have to come up with more money to get partials. I know I thougth about pulling them all myself and getting dentures too, this is just mercury talking to you at the moment..ignore the mercury and it's negative talk and find a competent dentist to remove them. You'll be glad you did when it's all done, and you have nice strong white teeth to chew with. > > Hello, > > I was thinking about this lately. I have 11 amalgan, some of them very > large. Lately I'm feeling quite badly, and my amalgams burn like hell. > I'm in a detoxing plan (not metal detoxing, just a liver, kidneys, > parasites cleaning) and it will take at least a month to be clean > enough to try an amalgam removal. When I'll go to remove them I > suppose that it will produce a lot of vapor and poison, possibly > poisoning me despite all the stuff I'd have used to protect me. Well, > I was thinking in removing some of my teeth with amalgams, at least > the biggest ones, the ones that are touching my gums. I suppose that > if you remove your teeth you won't get poisoned, isn't it? Is there > any disadvantage in removing your teeth, appart from losing your teeth > of course? > Any advice about this? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 17, 2008 Report Share Posted March 17, 2008 You should not be doing cleanses if you are full of Hg. This is very stressing on an already stressed liver. And there is no such thing as " being clean enough to do a removal " . Taking some sensible vitamins and minerals is a good idea but your body really cannot benefit from cleansing and detoxing when there is constant mercury pouring out of your teeth. Removal will not produce a lot of vapor and poisons if you have it done right by a competent person trained to do so (Huggins Dentists do well with this). (www.iaomt.org) I had 14 removed myself at one time. I did not suffer for it. I did not get sicker from it. I had improvements that very day, only a few hours after removal. I still am improving almost 2 years later. The dentist who removed them save my life.... There is no need to remove the teeth themselves unless you don't have the money to have the amalgam taken out safely. Most dentist won't do this anyway. If your anywhere near PA, email me for my dentists name/location. PS: I also had some very large amalgams, with more than one filling on a tooth. I was able to keep those teeth. Even if you pull the teeth, your still going to go through mercury dumping and need chelation..all the while having to deal with trying to heal up your extractions..which can be a problem when your toxic. Healing is not that easy and there can be problems. Then you still have to come up with more money to get partials. I know I thougth about pulling them all myself and getting dentures too, this is just mercury talking to you at the moment..ignore the mercury and it's negative talk and find a competent dentist to remove them. You'll be glad you did when it's all done, and you have nice strong white teeth to chew with. > > Hello, > > I was thinking about this lately. I have 11 amalgan, some of them very > large. Lately I'm feeling quite badly, and my amalgams burn like hell. > I'm in a detoxing plan (not metal detoxing, just a liver, kidneys, > parasites cleaning) and it will take at least a month to be clean > enough to try an amalgam removal. When I'll go to remove them I > suppose that it will produce a lot of vapor and poison, possibly > poisoning me despite all the stuff I'd have used to protect me. Well, > I was thinking in removing some of my teeth with amalgams, at least > the biggest ones, the ones that are touching my gums. I suppose that > if you remove your teeth you won't get poisoned, isn't it? Is there > any disadvantage in removing your teeth, appart from losing your teeth > of course? > Any advice about this? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 17, 2008 Report Share Posted March 17, 2008 - unfortunatley, there is. For one, the remaining teeth will not stay in place. They will begin to move in the mouth, and it will be important to do something to stabilize them. Secondly, removal produces problems due to the potential to produce cavitations. That is, the bone may not heal properly, particularly if you are metal toxic. Cavitations, as you may know, can also be quite seriously detrimental to health. Unfortunately, there is no good answer here, . I will mention that there is at least one dentist (some guy in Arizona) who takes amalgam out with a pick - he doesn't even drill. It takes a long time, but you should be exposed to a lot less than any procedure that involves drilling. (PS. I had 11 myself. And they were _big_) Dave. Posted by: " turmware " turmware@... turmware@...?Subject=%20Re%3ARemoving%20teeths%20instead%20of%20re\ moving%20amalgams%3F> turmware http://profiles.yahoo.com/turmware> Mon Mar 17, 2008 2:14 pm (PDT) Hello, I was thinking about this lately. I have 11 amalgan, some of them very large. Lately I'm feeling quite badly, and my amalgams burn like hell. I'm in a detoxing plan (not metal detoxing, just a liver, kidneys, parasites cleaning) and it will take at least a month to be clean enough to try an amalgam removal. When I'll go to remove them I suppose that it will produce a lot of vapor and poison, possibly poisoning me despite all the stuff I'd have used to protect me. Well, I was thinking in removing some of my teeth with amalgams, at least the biggest ones, the ones that are touching my gums. I suppose that if you remove your teeth you won't get poisoned, isn't it? Is there any disadvantage in removing your teeth, appart from losing your teeth of course? Any advice about this? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2008 Report Share Posted March 19, 2008 Hello, I was thinking about removing the teeth with large amalgams because the white around the amalgam is becoming grey, some teeth have more amalgam than tooth, some of the amalgams are touching my gums, so I suppose they have created tattooes in my gums. I think that if I remove the them it will be easier to detect tattoos and remove them. Besides I live in Spain, there aren't good dentist here. I've searched in the iamt web and I've found one dentist in italy another in the uk and another in switzerland. I was thinking about travel to any of this countries or to the US to remove my amalgams, I might go to a huggins dentist and have them removed at once. Do you think this is a good idea? About the cleaning i thought that it was better to clean your excretor organs before any amalgam removal because that way you can get rid of anything you get in the removal. Am I wrong? Another thing that I have in mind is that I've read in other posts that you need to be adrenal and thiroid supplemented before going to any amalgam removal, but I don't know what I can take to supplement this, can you tell what can I take? > > - unfortunatley, there is. For one, the remaining teeth will not > stay in place. They will begin to move in the mouth, and it will be > important to do something to stabilize them. Secondly, removal produces > problems due to the potential to produce cavitations. That is, the bone > may not heal properly, particularly if you are metal toxic. > Cavitations, as you may know, can also be quite seriously detrimental to > health. > > Unfortunately, there is no good answer here, . > > I will mention that there is at least one dentist (some guy in Arizona) > who takes amalgam out with a pick - he doesn't even drill. It takes a > long time, but you should be exposed to a lot less than any procedure > that involves drilling. > > (PS. I had 11 myself. And they were _big_) > > Dave. > > Posted by: " turmware " turmware@... > > turmware http://profiles.yahoo.com/turmware> > > > Mon Mar 17, 2008 2:14 pm (PDT) > > Hello, > > I was thinking about this lately. I have 11 amalgan, some of them very > large. Lately I'm feeling quite badly, and my amalgams burn like hell. > I'm in a detoxing plan (not metal detoxing, just a liver, kidneys, > parasites cleaning) and it will take at least a month to be clean > enough to try an amalgam removal. When I'll go to remove them I > suppose that it will produce a lot of vapor and poison, possibly > poisoning me despite all the stuff I'd have used to protect me. Well, > I was thinking in removing some of my teeth with amalgams, at least > the biggest ones, the ones that are touching my gums. I suppose that > if you remove your teeth you won't get poisoned, isn't it? Is there > any disadvantage in removing your teeth, appart from losing your teeth > of course? > Any advice about this? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2008 Report Share Posted March 19, 2008 My message in the text below.... > > > > - unfortunatley, there is. For one, the remaining teeth will > not > > stay in place. They will begin to move in the mouth, and it will be > > important to do something to stabilize them. Secondly, removal > produces > > problems due to the potential to produce cavitations. That is, the > bone > > may not heal properly, particularly if you are metal toxic. > > Cavitations, as you may know, can also be quite seriously > detrimental to > > health. > > > > Unfortunately, there is no good answer here, . > > > > I will mention that there is at least one dentist (some guy in Arizona) > > who takes amalgam out with a pick - he doesn't even drill. It takes a > > long time, but you should be exposed to a lot less than any procedure > > that involves drilling. > > > > (PS. I had 11 myself. And they were _big_) > > > > Dave. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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