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abcameronxyz (October 6, 2008 at 1:39 am)
rawrrrr
davidkennedydds (October 5, 2008 at 3:35 pm)
Root canals are efforts to retain a non-vital body part. Dentistry is the only profession that does this to my knowledge. Think about a dead toe for example.
Would you pay thousands of dollars to screw a dead toe back on, paint it skin colored, manufacture a porcelain nail to replace the one that fell off, deodorize it frequently because it smells? Or would you think that process insane?
When dead we have two choices:
A. You can be buried
B. You can be stuffed
Root canals are the latter.
davidkennedydds (October 5, 2008 at 6:57 am)
Blah blah blah. . . we do this and we do that but show me the analysis of the root contents when you are done.
Research has confirmed that regardless of how you try even specialists cannot make a porous tooth sterile.
Like a dead tree in the forest. . . once the tree dies the bugs start recycling the wood. Unfortunately the bacteria that dwell in dead teeth release hydrogen sulfide gas and many hugely toxic exotoxins are released from many but not all dead teeth with or without root canal.
davidkennedydds (October 5, 2008 at 6:51 am)
There are two problems with your solution. First and foremost research has firmly established that you cannot physically dissolve and remove the organic contents of the root. Therefore you have to leave gangrenous pulp in the canal.
second and perhaps even more importantly the tooth itself fills up with periodontal anaerobic pathogens regardless of how thoroughly you disinfect the canal. A major problem as I see it.
You apparently can temporarily disinfect the roots with iodine but not long.
flake007 (October 5, 2008 at 4:34 am)
The irrigation protocol its the following:
1. The first solution we use is Sodium hypochlorite 5.25% at room temperture, or also you can use it al 1% at a 60°C (it has bactericidal cytotoxicity, dissolution of organic material, and minor lubrification)
2. Then irrigate the canal with water or fisiologic solution (to remove the hypoclorite)
3. Irrigate with EDTA (17%) (Ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid,)these is to open up the pores of canal.
flake007 (October 5, 2008 at 4:31 am)
So in your opinion it is better to extract a tooth? To answer your dilema to Root Canal treatment, it is true that when the pulp it exposure to the oral bacteria it becomes a non-sterile environment; thas why we use an irrigation protocol to get rid of bacteria and dissolve the organic content of root.
stimpyl (October 4, 2008 at 12:17 pm)
one of the many ways we're being poisoned by the NWO. see my favorites for more.
THANKS for posting this !
davidkennedydds (October 3, 2008 at 7:23 pm)
What I gave you in the earlier message was the alloy content, not the Hg content.
Dispersalloy 50Megalloy EZ 43Unison 42Valiant 43
Valiant Phd 47.25Valiant Snap-Set 43Contour 47
Sybraloy 44.5Tytin 42.5Tytin FC 44.5GS-80 47.9
Lojic+ 42.2Permite 47.9Zenith prem Disp 50
Zenith Royale High Cu 50Zenith Type-T Spherical 43
A 2 spill Tytin with 600mg alloy would have 425mg mercury. I verified this with Kerr Corporation today to make sure I had the calculations correct.
davidkennedydds (October 3, 2008 at 5:43 pm)
ITS THE LAW
Failure to do any and all of the above OSHA requirements is a crime. The fact is this crime is quite common. In fact no dentists I know still using mercury have complied with the letter or the spirit of the law.
Many dentists who do not use mercury do comply by keeping their facility clean with engineering and work practice controls so that it is unlikely that an exposure will occur.
OSHA will investigate the office upon anonymous complaint by an employee or upon request.
davidkennedydds (October 2, 2008 at 4:40 pm)
OOps Wrong again. It was Robert Craig's Dental Materials text book 5th edition not Phillips. |