Wednesday, June 8, 2022

Too much sugar > acid bacteria > raises your pH > which starts dissolving your teeth.

The main reason for cavities is that we're leeching out calcium and phosphorous, a process called demineralization.  And this occurs when the Ph in the mouth becomes very, very acidic.  Normal pH is 7, that's neutral.  It drops down to a 6, 5, or even a 4.  Acids have the capacity to break down bone tissue.  And the enamel in your mouth is stronger than steel, so imagine what acids can do to your teeth.  The acids are caused by an excessive amount of bacteria brought on by eating an abundance of sugars that are causing different bacteria: streptococcus mucous and lactobacillus.  

Lactobacilli are members of the lactic acid bacteria, a broadly defined group characterized by the formation of lactic acid as a sole or main end product of carbohydrate metabolism. . . .  Eighty species of lactobacilli are recognized at present. 

Too much sugar > acid bacteria > raises your pH > which starts dissolving your teeth.   


Kids nowadays consume too much sugar?  Ha!!  Has he seen what most kids growing up in the 1960s and 1970s had in their breakfast cabinets?  Ever watch an episode of Seinfeld?  What does he have atop his refrigerator?  Boxes of sugary goodness . . . goodness that will cause your teeth to decay.  The American Dental Association must have been paying for the segment of his scenes in his show.  

Liquid candy in the form of soda?  Oh, yeah.  You mean to tell me that there were other beverages that quenched a kid's thirst?  No, not alcohol, which is another form of sugar.  Gatorade wasn't bad. 

Berg suggests getting kids on alternative sugars like Xylitol.  Oy.  How about no sugars at all?  Stevia is a powerful sweetener, meaning that it will provide a very sweet taste perhaps without all of the bacteria caused by sugar, but man is it sweet.  Too sweet.  There's a Greek yogurt brand, called Oikos, that uses Stevia.  Oh.  I taste it and I feel like I am eating something from a biolab in Ukraine.  There are better store-bought yogurts, like Nancy's.    

CINNAMON: AN EXCELLENT ANTI-BIOFILM FOR BRUSHING YOUR TEETH

Personally, I am not a fan of the xylitol gums or breath mints, because I don't do well with hardly any sugar forms except for sugar.  But since I don't want sugar either, I prefer the natural anti-biofilms that he lists:  Rosemary, Clove, Thyme, Garlic, Curcumin, Oregano, Cinnamon, and NAC.  In fact, over the years, many folks used baking soda as an abrasive to scrub the teeth of plaque and biofilms.  But the abrasive that I like is cinnamon, for not only does it clean the surface of the teeth, it also has lots of antibiotic properties that seep into the tiny cracks in your teeth and into the narrow fissures of your gums, and jaw and has a wonderful effect on the tiny blood vessels in your mouth.  For me, it has an invigorating effect.  Check out the benefits of brushing with cinnamon.    

Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Brain atrophy in a child with vitamin B12 deficiency and its reversal by B12 treatment . . .

Monday, June 6, 2022

CAN YOU WITHSTAND SOCIAL CONFORMITY? GOD, I HOPE SO

 

Pre-COVID19 programing video from 2015 — How much more susceptible to compliant conformity and robotic non-rational obedience do you think our species is today in 2022? The Milgrim Experiment is alive and still operative. Read Milton Mayer’s landmark book, They Thought They Were Free: The Germans 1933 to 1945.

MCDONALD'S KIOSK: TAKES 20 MINUTES TO ORDER $57