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Root canals - LT health issues
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<blockquote data-quote="Tail Gunner" data-source="post: 1277319" data-attributes="member: 2705"><p>You are missing the entire point of cavitation surgery. When a wisdom tooth is extracted and a dentist leaves soft tissue behind (i.e., he does not scrape down to the bone) that soft tissue will prevent bone growth, thereby leaving a pocket of dead tissue where bacteria can flourish and eventually spread to other parts of the body. Because of the lack of blood flow inside a cavitation, standard medications or drugs cannot reach these areas to kill bacteria. In fact, cavitations are officially known as "chronic ischemic bone disease," which is a name used to describe a disease process involving pathological changes in the bone tissue related to impaired blood flow (ischemia).</p><p></p><p>The point of cavitation surgery is to remove all the dead tissue, bacteria, and rotting bone. The dentist literally grinds down to good bone. That bone then regrows to fill the former pocket of dead tissue. There can be no bacteria, because there is now bone growth where the pocket previously existed (and where blood can now flow). The only bacteria that exists is now on top of the bone and under new tissue, where blood flow can provide white blood cells and transport medications.</p><p></p><p>Stated another way, the bacteria proliferates in the pocket because no blood flow reaches that area. The bone regrowth that refills the pocket solves that problem. The ozone and PRF simply ensures sterility in the pocket until the bone regrows. This process takes about six months to a year.</p><p></p><p>Stated yet a third way, my x-rays showed pockets in two of four wisdom teeth extraction sites. [If my dentist wanted to defraud me, he could have claimed that all four pockets were infected, but he did not.] About a year after surgery, the x-rays showed bone regrowth and the fact that the pockets were gone. Problem solved.</p><p></p><p>This article explains why root canals are somewhat similar to cavitations:</p><p></p><p><a href="https://naturaldentistrycenter.com/natural-dentistry/jaw-bone-infections-cavitations/" target="_blank">https://naturaldentistrycenter.com/natural-dentistry/jaw-bone-infections-cavitations/</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tail Gunner, post: 1277319, member: 2705"] You are missing the entire point of cavitation surgery. When a wisdom tooth is extracted and a dentist leaves soft tissue behind (i.e., he does not scrape down to the bone) that soft tissue will prevent bone growth, thereby leaving a pocket of dead tissue where bacteria can flourish and eventually spread to other parts of the body. Because of the lack of blood flow inside a cavitation, standard medications or drugs cannot reach these areas to kill bacteria. In fact, cavitations are officially known as "chronic ischemic bone disease," which is a name used to describe a disease process involving pathological changes in the bone tissue related to impaired blood flow (ischemia). The point of cavitation surgery is to remove all the dead tissue, bacteria, and rotting bone. The dentist literally grinds down to good bone. That bone then regrows to fill the former pocket of dead tissue. There can be no bacteria, because there is now bone growth where the pocket previously existed (and where blood can now flow). The only bacteria that exists is now on top of the bone and under new tissue, where blood flow can provide white blood cells and transport medications. Stated another way, the bacteria proliferates in the pocket because no blood flow reaches that area. The bone regrowth that refills the pocket solves that problem. The ozone and PRF simply ensures sterility in the pocket until the bone regrows. This process takes about six months to a year. Stated yet a third way, my x-rays showed pockets in two of four wisdom teeth extraction sites. [If my dentist wanted to defraud me, he could have claimed that all four pockets were infected, but he did not.] About a year after surgery, the x-rays showed bone regrowth and the fact that the pockets were gone. Problem solved. This article explains why root canals are somewhat similar to cavitations: [URL]https://naturaldentistrycenter.com/natural-dentistry/jaw-bone-infections-cavitations/[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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