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Re: OT: Dean - Cavitations/metal free bridges

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I did some searching, and found some interesting information on these

cone beam CT scans. It looks like something out of Star Trek.

http://www.osseonews.com/cone-beam-ct-for-old-extraction-sites/

http://www.osseonews.com/cone-beam-vs-traditional-ct-scans/

http://www.oralhealthjournal.com/issues/ISArticle.asp?id=188322&story_id=3114514\

2554&issue=06012007&PC=OH

http://www.suwaneedental.com/CBVT/Dental%20Cone%20Beam%20CT%20Scan.html

Thanks for mentioning this.

Jay

>

> The scan, to check for cavitations that my dentist was talking about

> is called a 3d cone beam scan. Apparently you can view it from any

> angle, because it's actually 3d and he says far superior to a cavitat

> scan.

>

> Horrors. I discovered by accident today that I have a third, crownless

> root canal - just when I thought I had finished with that business. I

> am going to have a flexite partial made for the one existing gap, but

> the dentist was trying to convince me that a bridge is better because

> you can chew on it and can't chew with a denture. He says there are

> ceramic metal free bridges. Any comments?

>

> deborah

>

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I did some searching, and found some interesting information on these

cone beam CT scans. It looks like something out of Star Trek.

http://www.osseonews.com/cone-beam-ct-for-old-extraction-sites/

http://www.osseonews.com/cone-beam-vs-traditional-ct-scans/

http://www.oralhealthjournal.com/issues/ISArticle.asp?id=188322&story_id=3114514\

2554&issue=06012007&PC=OH

http://www.suwaneedental.com/CBVT/Dental%20Cone%20Beam%20CT%20Scan.html

Thanks for mentioning this.

Jay

>

> The scan, to check for cavitations that my dentist was talking about

> is called a 3d cone beam scan. Apparently you can view it from any

> angle, because it's actually 3d and he says far superior to a cavitat

> scan.

>

> Horrors. I discovered by accident today that I have a third, crownless

> root canal - just when I thought I had finished with that business. I

> am going to have a flexite partial made for the one existing gap, but

> the dentist was trying to convince me that a bridge is better because

> you can chew on it and can't chew with a denture. He says there are

> ceramic metal free bridges. Any comments?

>

> deborah

>

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*I'm brand new to this group, but just did some dental work. The dentist

tested for materials compatibility. I'm allergic to the nickel in my crowns,

and you might be sensitive to some metals in a bridge. The testing was EAV -

muscle testing using a meter, very sensitive and also inexpensive. Rhoda*

> I did some searching, and found some interesting information on these

> cone beam CT scans. It looks like something out of Star Trek.

>

> http://www.osseonews.com/cone-beam-ct-for-old-extraction-sites/

> http://www.osseonews.com/cone-beam-vs-traditional-ct-scans/

>

>

http://www.oralhealthjournal.com/issues/ISArticle.asp?id=188322&story_id=3114514\

2554&issue=06012007&PC=OH

> http://www.suwaneedental.com/CBVT/Dental%20Cone%20Beam%20CT%20Scan.html

>

> Thanks for mentioning this.

>

> Jay

>

>

> >

> > The scan, to check for cavitations that my dentist was talking about

> > is called a 3d cone beam scan. Apparently you can view it from any

> > angle, because it's actually 3d and he says far superior to a cavitat

> > scan.

> >

> > Horrors. I discovered by accident today that I have a third, crownless

> > root canal - just when I thought I had finished with that business. I

> > am going to have a flexite partial made for the one existing gap, but

> > the dentist was trying to convince me that a bridge is better because

> > you can chew on it and can't chew with a denture. He says there are

> > ceramic metal free bridges. Any comments?

> >

> > deborah

> >

>

>

>

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> The scan, to check for cavitations that my dentist was talking about

> is called a 3d cone beam scan. Apparently you can view it from any

> angle, because it's actually 3d and he says far superior to a cavitat

> scan.

Thta does look fascinating, thanks for that.

> Horrors. I discovered by accident today that I have a third, crownless

> root canal - just when I thought I had finished with that business. I

> am going to have a flexite partial made for the one existing gap, but

> the dentist was trying to convince me that a bridge is better because

> you can chew on it and can't chew with a denture. He says there are

> ceramic metal free bridges. Any comments?

I would suggest you try the Flexite partial first and see how you get on. If

you are okay with the plate great. If not, you can always get a crown later.

The problem with a crown/bridge (despite the obvious problems with

compounds, ceramic included according to Dr ) is that first you have to

mess with teeth surrounding the extraction in order to make a bridge.

Now if these two teeth that will provide anchors for the bridge are healthy

virgin teeth that have never been touched, they will have to be ground down

to make anchors for the bridge. This is not a healthy option to mess with

healthy teeth. It means you'll have more crowns and thus more opportunities

for infection. Yes, all crowns become infected over time. If you have ever

been present when one is removed you'll, most times, want to retch from the

smell that is released. Decay takes place under the crown because there is

no immune system/saliva. Granted it is slow and the better the fite the

slower the decay, but for sick people it is worth considering.

DeanSA

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" Yes, all crowns become infected over time. "

I just had my amalgams removed/replaced safely by a biological dentist.

Looks good feels fine. But on one tooth that was

crowned(porcelain)...he went to far down and the nerve was exposed(i

think thats what he talked about, he nick named it " big red " ) and

prompted the assistant to go quickly speeding her up. Afterwards they

told me there was a risk of infection and my options would be

extraction(being safest), root canal, bridge. They did say however that

there was absolutely no signs of decay in the area before it happened.

This was 1 week ago. Everything is fine so far...

In my case how long would someone typically have before the tooth is

gonna have to go?

I have read of peroxide and it should not touch metal(so i never brushed

with peroxide while having amalgams). I read small amounts of metals

are still in porcelain. Can i brush with peroxide safely?

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" Yes, all crowns become infected over time. "

I just had my amalgams removed/replaced safely by a biological dentist.

Looks good feels fine. But on one tooth that was

crowned(porcelain)...he went to far down and the nerve was exposed(i

think thats what he talked about, he nick named it " big red " ) and

prompted the assistant to go quickly speeding her up. Afterwards they

told me there was a risk of infection and my options would be

extraction(being safest), root canal, bridge. They did say however that

there was absolutely no signs of decay in the area before it happened.

This was 1 week ago. Everything is fine so far...

In my case how long would someone typically have before the tooth is

gonna have to go?

I have read of peroxide and it should not touch metal(so i never brushed

with peroxide while having amalgams). I read small amounts of metals

are still in porcelain. Can i brush with peroxide safely?

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" Yes, all crowns become infected over time. "

I just had my amalgams removed/replaced safely by a biological dentist.

Looks good feels fine. But on one tooth that was

crowned(porcelain)...he went to far down and the nerve was exposed(i

think thats what he talked about, he nick named it " big red " ) and

prompted the assistant to go quickly speeding her up. Afterwards they

told me there was a risk of infection and my options would be

extraction(being safest), root canal, bridge. They did say however that

there was absolutely no signs of decay in the area before it happened.

This was 1 week ago. Everything is fine so far...

In my case how long would someone typically have before the tooth is

gonna have to go?

I have read of peroxide and it should not touch metal(so i never brushed

with peroxide while having amalgams). I read small amounts of metals

are still in porcelain. Can i brush with peroxide safely?

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> I just had my amalgams removed/replaced safely by a biological dentist.

> Looks good feels fine. But on one tooth that was

> crowned(porcelain)...he went to far down and the nerve was exposed(i

> think thats what he talked about, he nick named it " big red " ) and

> prompted the assistant to go quickly speeding her up. Afterwards they

> told me there was a risk of infection and my options would be

> extraction(being safest), root canal, bridge. They did say however that

> there was absolutely no signs of decay in the area before it happened.

> This was 1 week ago. Everything is fine so far...

> In my case how long would someone typically have before the tooth is

> gonna have to go?

It may never need to go if all is well. What the dentist was most likely

trying to say is that the drilling has exposed the nerve in the canal and

opened up the oppertunity for infection. If the nerve becomes infected then

the tooth will (in their opinion) need to be root canaled (dangerous) or

extracted.

If the nerve becomes infected often you have pain, pusling pain that won't

go away. Though sometimes it can die quitely.

We have used Dr s tooth zapper on these occasion and saved teeth that

dentists would never have belived could be saved. We have the x-rays to

proove it and the dentist said she had never seen it happen before.

http://www.livingnetwork.co.za/drclarknetwork/tooth_zapper.html

> I have read of peroxide and it should not touch metal(so i never brushed

> with peroxide while having amalgams). I read small amounts of metals

> are still in porcelain. Can i brush with peroxide safely?

There is some metal (uranium I beleive in porcelain) so I'm not clear on

what to telll you.

What would you be using it for? To reduce possiblity of infection?

DeanSA

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>

>

> > I just had my amalgams removed/replaced safely by a biological

dentist.

> > Looks good feels fine. But on one tooth that was

> > crowned(porcelain)...he went to far down and the nerve was exposed(i

> > think thats what he talked about, he nick named it " big red " ) and

> > prompted the assistant to go quickly speeding her up. Afterwards they

> > told me there was a risk of infection and my options would be

> > extraction(being safest), root canal, bridge. They did say

however that

> > there was absolutely no signs of decay in the area before it happened.

> > This was 1 week ago. Everything is fine so far...

> > In my case how long would someone typically have before the tooth is

> > gonna have to go?

> It may never need to go if all is well. What the dentist was most

likely

> trying to say is that the drilling has exposed the nerve in the

canal and

> opened up the oppertunity for infection. If the nerve becomes

infected then

> the tooth will (in their opinion) need to be root canaled

(dangerous) or

> extracted.

>

> If the nerve becomes infected often you have pain, pusling pain that

won't

> go away. Though sometimes it can die quitely.

> We have used Dr s tooth zapper on these occasion and saved

teeth that

> dentists would never have belived could be saved. We have the x-rays to

> proove it and the dentist said she had never seen it happen before.

> http://www.livingnetwork.co.za/drclarknetwork/tooth_zapper.html

>

>

> > I have read of peroxide and it should not touch metal(so i never

brushed

> > with peroxide while having amalgams). I read small amounts of metals

> > are still in porcelain. Can i brush with peroxide safely?

> There is some metal (uranium I beleive in porcelain) so I'm not

clear on

> what to telll you.

> What would you be using it for? To reduce possiblity of infection?

>

> DeanSA

>

Yah just to reduce infection.

How exactly does the zapper work? Ive read the curezone forums... I

would like to try it. But I do not understand it...

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> Yah just to reduce infection.

> How exactly does the zapper work? Ive read the curezone forums... I

> would like to try it. But I do not understand it...

It is not something to play with when you are mercury toxic as it moves

metals, but if you have no more metal in your mouth and have a specific

tooth to save like in this situation, then it can be phenomenal. You would

zap for 3-5 minutes on the top, and each side of the tooth once a day. The

first day just zap once and see if you have a response of redistribution -

though this has not been a big problem, I'm just cautions.

4-6 weeks of it has cured two so-called 'incurable abscesses in teeth that

'needed' extraction. We have the x-rays.

It has also helped with pain in other cases.

Basically it produces a frequency that penetrates the teeth and kills

bacteria that are there through resonance. Simply really and more than that

I don't know.

DeanSA

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Hi Dean:

I'm interested in your comments on the tooth zapping. Did you use the

actual " tooth Zappinator " that Hulda clarke's group promotes. There are so

many different zappers out there now it's confusing. If you would be good

enough to give us the web site for purchase so we can get the right one.

By the way, do you think it would help heal cavitations? It seems too

incredible to be possible but if something like this could help avoid

surgery.....? Your thoughts would be appreciated.

Donna

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Hi Dean:

I'm interested in your comments on the tooth zapping. Did you use the

actual " tooth Zappinator " that Hulda clarke's group promotes. There are so

many different zappers out there now it's confusing. If you would be good

enough to give us the web site for purchase so we can get the right one.

By the way, do you think it would help heal cavitations? It seems too

incredible to be possible but if something like this could help avoid

surgery.....? Your thoughts would be appreciated.

Donna

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