Faq – teeth and caries, birth on your own

Faq - teeth and caries, birth on your own

Birth on your own

A clean tooth is a healthy tooth?

"Clean teeth do not get tooth decay." That is probably the most classic dogma of conventional dentistry. However, reality does not stand up to this dogma. I brushed my big teeth from the first tooth. She had by far the most holes in her milk teeth from all of our six children (whom I didn’t brush my teeth from the start). I myself have worked hard all my life: with dental floss, interdental brushes and whatnot. I always had holes. Until 6 years ago. So I changed my diet to Weston Price (as described in the book “Caries Healing” by Ramiel Nagel). I haven’t got a single new hole since. Although I only clean once more in the evening. With water, without toothpaste and without brushes and other frills. And I was three times pregnant in that time too. The races that Weston Price documented were caries-free without a dentist and toothbrush – until they adopted the Western diet. The assumption that clean teeth are healthy teeth is based on the approximately 100 year old belief in conventional medicine that bacteria make us sick. And that you can prevent diseases by removing the bacteria. This theory replaced juice theory and other disease theories when the microscope was invented and bacteria could be observed in it. Science is only slowly discovering that this conclusion is a fallacy. Because: Man, like everything else in nature, is an ecosystem. Bacteria are urgently needed to keep the ecological system healthy. If the ecosystem gets out of balance – as a rule in humans due to deficiencies or errors in nutrition – the presence of certain bacteria is an indicator of an imbalance – not the cause.

How can I detect tooth decay??

Yellowish to yellow-brown color usually means active tooth decay. If it’s superficial, it usually doesn’t hurt. The darker a caries, the slower it usually progresses. Brown to black usually means that the caries has stopped. With a tooth probe you can feel whether the tooth is hard and firm (the tooth probe glides over the surface without resistance) or soft (the tooth probe gets stuck). Hard means standing still, soft means caries is active.

However, very superficial caries can also look light brown and be remineralized. The most reliable, I think, is the sample, whether it’s soft or not. A hole in the tooth (so that something is missing) but without discoloration can also be caries.

I think the caries on the visible tooth surfaces can be seen quite well … at the latest when the enamel changes color in certain areas (white, later brown) and the tooth loses substance – i.e. a hole grows. Between the teeth is more difficult. The first thing you notice is that fibrous food gets stuck. Sometimes something sticks between my teeth when my gums are irritated at the site or because some of my inlays are not completely flush with the tooth … Under certain circumstances, only an X-ray image can clarify this.

A black tooth is a dead tooth?

A black tooth doesn’t have to be dead. It can still be very lively.

A white spot on the tooth means that tooth decay begins there?

Melt defects often appear as white spots. The enamel is not quite as dense there, there is a slight demineralization, which is why it appears whiter. Doesn’t mean that you have to get tooth decay there – but it can be. Today’s dentist learns that bacteria that tend to settle where the enamel is not as dense are to blame for tooth decay. The alternative dentist (and not everyone) knows that progressive demineralization (caries) results from an imbalance in the diet ("bad" bacteria are present and involved, but not as the cause of the imbalance, but as a consequence). Only under these conditions can such a melting defect lead to active caries.

Can Caries Really Cure? Then the hole disappears and is refilled?

Caries heals under good nutritional conditions in the sense that the tooth remineralises what has not decayed too far (caries comes to a standstill, the tooth substance becomes hard again) and – if you keep the splint – you will almost certainly never have tooth decay again gets. As a rule, holes are not filled. Small initial caries can, however, disappear completely.

I have tooth decay. But my blood levels of vitamin D are fine. How can that be?

The blood values ​​do not necessarily have to be in the basement. Even a slight imbalance can be seen on the teeth. Vitamin D is just one component of many that are important for caries-free teeth. Vitamin K2 is e.g. also important for mineralization. But there is still no laboratory test for this.

When would you have a hole filled??

I would have a hole filled if it bothers me, e.g. if Food caught in it. That’s the case with my one tooth, but I’m still hesitating. On the other hand, I know that a dentist drills away a lot of healthy tooth substance and I don’t want that. The filling materials are also not without. Many are constantly releasing fluorides. I do not want that either. With the appropriate nutrition, the tooth decay comes to a standstill, the tooth becomes hard and painless. The hole does not affect you in itself, even if the dentist still sees a hole that he absolutely wants to patch up, as he has learned.

22 thoughts too “FAQ – teeth and caries”

I am currently pregnant and unfortunately I have discovered a caries that is brownish and a hole between the gums and the beginning of the tooth (posterior molar) does not hurt, how can I stabilize it so that it comes to a standstill. So I wouldn’t have to be drilled. We do not use Fluoriede toothpaste.

But maybe you have more tips for me here, I would be very happy

Hello Jacqueline,
it’s best to get in here. The fat-soluble vitamins D, A and K2 are very important. Can recommend the book by Ramiel Nagel "Healing caries" as a basic reading. With that I got the caries under control – even during pregnancy. Detailed questions then gladly here. If you are at fb: In the group "Healing tooth decay" there is a document that summarizes Weston Price’s nutritional principles, which are also the basis of Nagel’s book.
Best regards, Sarah

Hello Sarah,
I learned a lot about W. Price’s nutritional principles here on your website and read everything with great interest. I have a few questions about this …
My daughter is 10 months old. She is a very small and narrow child for her age. I still breastfeed very often. Can I already give her 2.5 ml of cod-liver oil / butter oil mixture daily or less? Then how do I most skilfully administer it to her? Mixed in the porridge? So far, she has received a drop of Vigantol oil every day. Can or should I leave out the vigantol when I give her cod liver oil? Could there be an overdose of vitamin D if I give you both?

Kind regards, Anja Kammerad

Hello Anja,
I think you can’t go wrong with 2.5 ml. If you want to do it exactly, you can also go by body weight. Then a child with a body weight of 10 kg gets 1.2 ml, with 15 kg 1.7 ml and with 20 kg 2.5 ml. (From the book "Caries cure", it says in American teaspoons, I have it in ml converted)
You can give it normally with a spoon, ideally when it is at room temperature. Then the consistency is better. Cold in the fridge, it is quite firm and difficult to swallow. You can also mix it in the porridge. How it works best for you. You don’t actually need to give Vigantol. If you give both for a few months (e.g. now in winter), there will be no overdose – normally dosed. Of course, it also depends on how she was previously supplied with vitamin D. If you had taken cod liver oil or Vigantol and passed it on with breast milk, the supply would be different than if it were only the Vigantol drops for her after birth. I suspect that you did not take anything yourself, neither during pregnancy nor during breastfeeding, and therefore it is therefore probably more at the lower limit with vitamin D than at the upper one. Therefore, it can be useful to give a little more for 2-3 months (either more cod liver oil or cod liver oil supplemented with Vigantol) to increase the vitamin D level and replenish the stores.
All the best to you! &# 128578;
Sarah

Thank you for your reply. My daughter loves cod liver oil. She is happy every time I even get the cod liver oil bottle out of the closet. I just give it to her on a small spoon and she doesn’t mind the taste – on the contrary! I have to overcome myself every time. I envy them!
Best regards, Anja

First of all, thank you for your great videos that have inspired me a lot and your blog that I am now starting to explore !! I am 39 weeks pregnant and it is our first child. I believe / hope that I don’t have tooth decay, but I’ve been a little tired for just under a week and my gums are all inflamed and swollen and a lot of pain. I think it has to do with pregnancy and a weak immune system. I don’t want to go to the dentist with my sore gums. Do you think I have a mineral deficiency or what can I do now? I would be very grateful for tips!

best regards,
Caro

Dear Caro,
You can try it acutely with regular oil pulling – i.e. olive oil or similar. move back and forth in the mouth, preferably for a few minutes, then spit it out. You can also google, there is a lot on the net. Mouthwash with salt water is also said to have a soothing effect, as well as various herbs. (There is a chapter on gums in the book "Caries Healing", which is described in more detail).
In any case, inflamed gums indicate that there is an imbalance in the body. However, it doesn’t say what’s exactly wrong. Vitamin C deficiency typically causes inflamed gums, but that’s just one of many things. I would probably start with nutrition in the medium term to help the body to balance itself. If it now shows such symptoms due to pregnancy and you also talk about the fact that your immune system is weak, everything is probably not optimal even during pregnancy. Everything that supports the immune system (good bacteria above all) can then help to bring the body more into balance.
All the best to you and for the birth!
Sarah

there are text passages that are not so coherent for me. eg. the holes no longer grow back, that’s absolutely not true. I managed to grow a deep hole with the sango sea coral within six months. important here, buy from a bioshop, not in tablet form and tested for radiation …

furthermore, it is not true that only nutrition or nutrition is so important whether caries comes to a standstill. you have to take a holistic view of everything in our body in order to find out the real cause. Certain rows of teeth have certain topics, and individual teeth also have certain topics. have children problems with the ones so the likelihood is great that it is a parental topic that concerns them at the moment. and so every tooth has its topic. in addition, the teeth are also connected to various organs, which means that it may not be the tooth that is the "culprit", but that there is a problem with the associated organ. and then you have to look further, what are the topics of the organ. A real cure exists when you find out the cause and can change this part in your life.

Hello, is there a book or where can I read which tooth has which topic and organ? And how exactly did you do it with Sango Coral??

You could find it here:

Rosemarie Mieg: "Teeth as a disease focus"

Or at the GZM International Society for Holistic Dental Medicine e.V..

Hello Sarah,
I have a few questions and would like to hear your opinion about it: 1. My son (2) got tartar very early. For him it is only on the upper teeth, but particularly noticeable because he has "Black Stain". Do you know how to get this out? 2. Unfortunately, I have always had amalgam since childhood. What do you think of having them removed? However, I am currently breastfeeding and plan to breastfeed at least 2 years ago. 3. I have a transverse wisdom tooth. He had lit from time to time, but now I have no more problems, only that leftover food sometimes gets stuck and it doesn’t look so aesthetically pleasing. Would you have it removed? I find it difficult to weigh the advantages and disadvantages of breastfeeding. I got pregnant last year (before weaning) and now everything is delayed again. I hope you can give me advice

Love from,
Sindy

Hello Sindy,
Black stain usually disappears again at puberty at the latest. Apparently there is a family tendency. As far as I know, there is not much you can do, except diligent cleaning and cleaning it up with professional teeth cleaning. However, it is not dangerous, i.e. Black stain does not cause a higher risk of caries. Increased tartar already speaks for a less than optimal saliva composition. You would have to look where the imbalance in the body comes from.
Amalgam in the body is definitely not good. However, I would probably wait until the end of breastfeeding with the removal, since even with all precautionary measures larger amounts of amalgam are released.
With the wisdom tooth is such a thing. If he doesn’t bother, you can wait. At best, a wisdom tooth can only be removed with local anesthesia. I had it done while I was breastfeeding. This does not affect breastfeeding any further. For me, however, the wisdom tooth was not across. If it is more complicated, it may be different. I would discuss the details with the doctor treating me.
Best regards, Sarah

Dear Sarah, I sincerely hope that you currently have time to answer the comments here on your page. I urgently need someone with experience &# 128578; My son, just 20 months old, has black spots on his molars. According to the dentist, it is superficial tooth decay. I breastfeed him and I think that is still his main food source at the moment. He eats everything, but in microscopic amounts. We have been vegetarian so far. I am currently changing the diet so that some meat is added. The complete change in diet as presented in the book "Caries cure" is currently unimaginable for me. I also bought the Green Pasture capsules (cod liver oil + butter oil). I’m still a bit baffled about the dosage. It says 2 a day. I read about 7-8 capsules for adults every day. Besides, I don’t know how my little son could take that. Would it be possible to open the capsule and empty the contents and pour them into a glass? Or is it enough if I take it and continue breastfeeding? I’m grateful for any advice and advice on how we can get our teeth under control.

Dear Mara,
There is the cod liver oil without a capsule around it. It’s called gel. Since it is even cheaper in proportion. Except for our big daughter, we all take it from a spoon and without a capsule. If you can’t tolerate the taste, you can also fill this cod liver oil in capsules yourself.

Hello dear Sarah,

have read your great page and am enthusiastic, have been looking for valuable information about caries all the time, not that easy … I ordered the book and cod liver oil today and hope to get my teeth in order, it started actually after the second birth (which was a home birth). Only one filling fell out, numbers two and three followed every six months. Since I am now my own doctor, a visit to the dentist was out of the question. However, when I filled it for the first time, a hole so deep that my nerve was practically uncovered, I endured the whole thing for half a year in the hope that it would withdraw, none. The trip to the dentist was inevitable. After a fierce discussion with him, he then only replaced the one filling with the information that a later root canal treatment is absolutely necessary. Since then I have been very concerned with teeth. Because among the other two fillings that are out there is tooth decay, which I will hopefully defeat with the help of the book and the diet. But I have a question. I would be interested in your opinion on the acid-base balance and caries. Because I was of the opinion that dairy products and meat in particular make acidic and thus promote the development of tooth decay. And what about long-term breastfeeding and the dental health of toddlers? My daughter almost 2 is not in the mood for cleaning… I look forward to your answer and please keep going and inform people about these topics! The issue of birth is so important and deserves better education!
Best regards
Rebecca

Dear Rebecca,
the theory of overacidification is not really supported. I can best imagine and so a medical practitioner once explained to me that there is an acidification of cells that can no longer regulate due to a disturbed communication with their environment. Otherwise, the body is very keen to keep its acid-base balance in balance. In this situation, a "basic" diet is of no use as long as the communication of the cells is disturbed. Then the goal should be to correct the imbalance that disrupts the regulation of the cells.
Apart from this, in many cases it is unclear whether a food will ultimately be metabolized as basic or acidic. The whole regulation of the body is also much more complex. There are areas that are deliberately kept acidic (stomach, vaginal milieu). Breaking the body down into such a simplified system "base is good – acid is bad" does not do justice to this complexity.
If you look in traditional cultures that were caries-free, nobody there was "basic", nobody was vegan. On the contrary. And yet they were caries-free. I therefore consider this connection to be excluded.
On long-term breastfeeding: A study overview concludes that there is no connection between long-term breastfeeding and caries in the first year of life, but a slight connection in the second year of life. However, other factors probably play a role, otherwise you would have to see this effect in the first year of life. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/apa.13118
Whether cleaning is the best caries prevention can also be left open. Since I started working with Weston Price and tried it myself, I don’t believe in it anymore. I’ve been cleaning like a world champion for decades. But I didn’t get any new tooth decay until we changed our diet. Now I brush as little as never. Once a day with water. There are clearly factors that play a greater role than cleaning.
Best regards, Sarah

Dear Sarah,
Many thanks for your response!
With the acid bases, I find an interesting view and find it very conclusive, because as you say, the body is in balance and with the right nutrition, it is very good at it and can heal itself if necessary ! I currently need your advice and experience again. Once around my molar tooth from which the huge filling fell out, the nerve was then exposed and I had a temporary cement made on it, since it was very painful when something came to the nerve. The nerve is currently making itself felt and throbbing slightly. What kind of filling material would you recommend if it were unavoidable? Because I can well imagine that the current material is not really that good … The other part of this molar is filled with Amallgan. Are you generally for material removal? From today’s perspective, it could go insane what the dentists at that time did to my teeth !! The second concern is my son (5 years) caries on both upper molars in between with a hole! Were on vacation now and have sinned now it hurts! Since we are back I have changed the diet again, by protest is understood … I have concerns with the abscess over the two molars, this disappears with the change or what I can do is very helpless, try it with tea tree oil too already gone back a bit but I’m a little unsure. Would it be nice if you could tell me about your experience with your daughter !? Thank you so much! Kind regards Rebecca

Dear Rebecca,
how are you doing now I let go again, sift through comments, so my answer a little late … &# 128539;
Cement is considered to be the best biologically compatible. Just doesn’t last long. But I know some who simply have the cement made over and over again. Has the nerve calmed down? What did your dentist recommend? There are different options depending on the size of the hole. If it is very large, a plastic filling may not offer enough stability for chewing a molar tooth. I would only take plastic with a nerve-protecting underfill, otherwise it may be that the nerve is attacked by the plastic so that it dies more than ever. The optimal filling material is unfortunately not available …

Amalgam is one of those things. Despite protective measures, the removal releases a lot of mercury in the body. If you leave it, a small amount is released continuously. I would make it dependent on whether there are any complaints. Not all complaints come from amalgam. It’s unpredictable whether removal will improve or not … Difficult decision …

The abscess of teeth with a hole means that the tooth has certainly died. Abscesses on milk teeth often disappear and the dead tooth – with a reasonably good diet – can remain symptom-free until the teeth are changed. If the body has everything under control, the tooth hurts for a few days while it dies and then no longer. If the body is not in control, the inflammation can spread and cause pain and a thick cheek. Then you should do something. If the diet was right, it is rather unlikely. We already had a few dead milk teeth (have several children), which then made way for the healthy permanent with the change of teeth. They only caused problems when they died and not afterwards. Incidentally, it rarely happens that the remaining are attacked by it. Even if dentists like to fear it. Dentists work differently with such teeth. Some let it and watch as long as it is or is symptom-free. Some ream the tooth, expecting the pus to drain (which it does automatically through a fistula / abscess). Others pull the tooth (which is certainly justified in the case of a larger, discomforting inflammatory focus) and make a placeholder, which must then be worn until the permanent remains. The very modern faction of pediatric dentists sometimes tries to get a root canal. Expensive with questionable benefits.
Best regards, Sarah

Hello Sarah, first of all thank you very much for your effort to collect such valuable information here! I have a question about jagged teeth and hope you can help me.
My daughter (6) gets her second teeth, which are jagged on the cutting edge. Your father has that too. However, I was hoping to save her with the right nutrition. Do we have to put up with it now because she obviously inherited it, or is there anything else I can do? Do you know the cause of jagged teeth?
Thank you in advance and best regards to you and your gang from South Hesse. Annalena

Dear Annalena, it is normal for the permanent incisors to have jagged edges when they break through. They wear out over time. That this does not happen is certainly due to a bite constellation in which these teeth experience little wear …

hello dear .. thanks for this wonderful knowledge .. maybe i skipped it in the flood, but if not, i am missing the list of glyphosate exposure (especially in early pregnancy when the teeth are placed on the baby) ) .. on glyphosat-test.de you can have your urine independently tested for glyphosate and, if necessary, drain and detoxify .. that was still a missing component for me, why children (my little one included) are often born with enamel defects come

That’s right, glyphosate is still missing. The list of questions has to be updated again, see on my list or I have already started.

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