Thursday, December 23, 2010

Decay Is Infection Too

Enamel the outer layer of the tooth above the gumline is the hardest substance known to man.  It is harder than bone.  The sugar eating bacteria live above the gumline.  They are nasty little critters.   Once they colonize they convert what we eat into sugar, ingest the sugar and produce ACID.  This acid destroys the enamel and creates enamel infection.   If left unchecked the enamel infection will progress to the pulp or nerve of the tooth .  Once the infection gets to the pulp it goes systemic.  This feeding activity of the colonized sugar eaters can be stopped by breaking up the colonies of bacteria before you eat ...   DRY BRUSH before you eat.  The areobic bacteria cannot feed and produce acid if they are not in a feeding unit ... break the colonies up with a dry toothbrush because the taste of your food will not be altered and toothpaste is unnecessary for breaking up these feeding units. 

Stop the decay by dry brushing before you eat.   Chose  health.    Keep a toothbrush handy and dry brush as frenquently as possible during the day.  It becomes a habit...a compulsion if you will and you will begin to get a healthy mouth which will also effect your body in good ways.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Irma's Fantastic Voyage

Let me take you on a journey an expedition if you will below the gumline or gingival margin.  the entrance to the cavernous dark sulcus.  As I begin my descent and the light begins to fade I turn on the headlamps of my nano (vehicle) of my submersable.   I first encounter the motile carnivorous bacterial species that inhabit this environment.  I approach the Great Wall of the cavern that is the cemental surface of the tooth and observe a frightening display they have joined in a battle group  and a feeding unit united for one purpose seek and destroy.   I turn my vehicle 180 degrees and look at the soft vulnerable epithelial barrier, the sulcular epithelium.   The only barrier that keeps them from invading and ravaging the host organism.  I watch their tactics hoping to find some measure of defense.  Once colonized and organized into a feeding unit their first wave of their attack is biochemical warfare.  They release toxins that kill the epithelial cellular soldiers.  They are quickly overcome and perish bavely in the battle but the barrier is breached they have successfully invaded the host.  I feel despair is their nothing that can stop the carnage.  BUT wait I see thin nylon cylinders attacking the colony.  a silken rope appears and adds reinforcement.  Most of the colony has abandonded their base camp, and now a sharpened wooden device eliminates the last of their battle group.  The epitheliar soldiers at the barrier gain recruits and the invasion is over for now.  but i see the colony beginning to form again, and realize this is a never ending day to day battle.

Whoa !  I must have drifted for a moment,  but I'm much better now.   I remember I'm a Hyienist in Knoxville America.  I'm teaching Comprehensive Self Care, subgingival disruption of biofilm.  Yes ! that is how you must adapt the brush for sulcular cleaning, yes that's how you must adapt the floss for the submarginal convesities and the perio Aide for submarginal concavities.  Mission accomplished.  What's that Carol.........Yes,   Next Patient !

Friday, December 17, 2010

Sulca Brushing

There is a piece of tooth under the gum tissue that needs cleaning.    Angle the bristles that are closest to the tooth 90 degrees straight into the gum tissue.  Initially if the tissue is infected it will bleed but cleaning this area daily the bleeding WILL stop within 3 days to a week.    Wiggle the bristles into the gum tissue & give 3 wiggles and then sweep forward.    Inside & outside of every tooth once a day.   Do Not put toothpaste on the brush.  Toothpaste is an abrasive and this surface that you are cleaning is the dentin of the tooth which is less dense than the enamel.   Your gum tissue will become firm like an orange peel.  Coral Pink the color of health.   Once a day , take the time.   Your health is worth the time invested.

A perfect time to sulca brush or cleaning your tongue or just dry brushing is in the shower.  You will brush longer because the water feels relaxing and automatic rinse water.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Dry Brush

Toothpaste is an abrasive and not necessary to break up the bacterial colonies that eat, sleep, and poop  in our mouths  with that said DRY BRUSH      Stick a toothbrush in your pocket and dry brush during the course of the day as often as you can.   Don't worry about making your mouth dirty with a brush from your pocket .   You could drop the brush on the floor, pick it up and put it in your mouth and make the brush dirtier from the bugs in your mouth than from having placed it on the floor.

    Your mouth is a Vat of Bacteria.  The bacteria live there harmoniously.  They do not cause problems unless they are in a bacterial colonie with that said  break the colonies up during the course of the day with a dry toothbrush.   Easy   just get a little OCD about it ;  such health and beauty benefits.   OCD =  Oral Compulsive Disorder

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Oral Health

" A person can' t have good general health without good oral health "

 --  Former US Surgeon General C. Everett Koop

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Periodontal Disease and Overall Health:

The relationship of oral disease to overall disease is certainly no  new concept.  For centuries, the role of oral infection and inflammation in contributing to diseases elsewhere in the body has been studied and reported.  Going back to ancient times in Greece, we learn that Hippocrates treated two patients suffering from joint pain by removal of teeth.  Clearly, this was an early example of oral disease being associated with afflictions elswhere in the body.  Then, moving forward in time from 1912 to around 1950, the era of "focal infection" dominated our thinking.  Reports by individuals such as WD Miller, William Hunter , and Frank Billings noted that in their opinion many of the diseases of humans could be traced to specific foci of infection elswhere in the body,  such as the teeth and gums, then tonsils, or the sinuses.  While these observations were not supported by sound scientific evidence, and in fact led to largely incorrect practices, they nontheless brought attention of the effect of the mouth on the rest of the body.

Association Between Periodontal Diseases and Diabetes Mellitus

A Pervasive Disease Affecting Global Populations

Association Between Periodontal Disease and Atheromatous Diseases

Periodontal Disease and Pregnancy Complications

Oral Health and Diseases of the Respiratory Tract

Periodontal Disease and Osteoporosis

Association Between periodontitis and Rheumatoid Arthritis

Oral Health, Periodontitis , and Cancer

Cardiovascular Disease

Ray C. Williams

Robert J. Genco  Ray C. Williams  ,copyright2010 by the Colgate-Palmolive Company. , Referenced from Periodontal Disease and Overall health A Clinician's Guide 2010 C

Monday, December 6, 2010

The Smell Of Death

When you wake up in the morning and your breath smells like poop....that's the smell of death.   The bacteria that once were alive have died and encrusted on your tongue.   First thing go to the sink scrape your tongue.  Go as far back as you can and come forward with rake type device.   You will not believe what comes off your tongue.   I call it tongue snot.    Stuff that drains from your throat and collects on the tongue  dead tissue and bacteria.  Dry brush with a toothbrush and no toothpaste.   Then go have your coffee or bagel with a morning fresh breath and mouth.  

The bacteria in our mouths are alive and dead and depending on that time line that 's the odors that are happening in our mouths .

Tongue scrapers are about $2 at Walmart or Walgreens OR when in a pinch use your fingernails ....always , daily .   Fingernails are not AS effective as scraper but cost effective and always available