Last nite after I ate dinner I thought i had some food caught in my back molar. Nope! My gum is very sore and iritated...much like it was when I had the tooth there 2 years ago.
It feels really iritated. I will start the salt water rinse......the biotene mouth wash helps to sooth it.
I just dont know how many infections my body can have at once. Im on flagyl....but i doubt that will help with the tooth problem. ugh...
Posted by lymie tony z (Member # 5130) on :
I have had and continue to have what seems to be sympathetic nerve pain where I used to have teeth....
just part of the whole bag......
If you're gums are sore you may well have an infection which will probably need attention on penicillin or amoxy...
Flagyl probably won't help gums......zman
Posted by map1131 (Member # 2022) on :
cant, you need to read some Gigi posts on teeth and mouth. This issue with you needs to be addressed. There is something in that gum whether it is bacteria, virus, toxins etc? It's a hang out joint, let's party for some bad guy.
I found using my rife machine that I had staph infection surrounding a molar tooth that is a root canal.
Reading Gigi enforces the mouth/tooth and chronic illness connection.
Pam
[ 09. February 2006, 03:55 PM: Message edited by: map1131 ]
Posted by SForsgren (Member # 7686) on :
quote:Originally posted by map1131: I found using my rife machine that I had staph infection surrounding a molar tooth that is a root canal.
How did you find this using your Rife machine? Are you using an F-SCAN or ?
Posted by paige1 (Member # 7486) on :
Like Gigi, I too have been through the tooth/jawbone infection.
Most oral surgeons in the U.S. do not extract teeth properly. They usually don't pull the peridontal ligament or clean the bone out underneath. As a result, a low grade infection can set up shop in the bone and surrounding tissue, causing bone loss, pain, sinus problems and systemic health problems throughout different areas of the body (not to mention supressing the immune system). Over time this infection can spread, as mine did.
I also encourage you to look up some of Gigi's past posts on this, she has many detailed notes that will be helpful. I would suggest you have a panorex x-ray of your entire mouth taken and have it read by an expert on these infections which can be almost impossible to detect (by most dentists) on film. There are only a few of these experts (IMO). Like Gigi, I suggest Dr. H in Nevada, he is the best. He can read your original (not a copy) panorex and send you a very detailed write up of his findings.
In Chinese medicine, when they read the pulses, these bone infections in the jaw present as the same pulse as someone who has cancer. That doesn't mean one has cancer, it only shows how deeply it cuts to the core of one's immune system. These infections are serious but treatable. I feel so much better now that I'm addressing my dental issues.
Good luck!
Posted by map1131 (Member # 2022) on :
Scott, my muscle testing doctor and my rife book of freqs that came with my Beam Ray Rife. Muscle testing has brought up many interesting rife treatments. Gigi is leary of my machine. At one time Dr K was using Beam Ray and decided it was too powerful. Gigi warns me to be careful with it, but I only do what comes up in muscle testing.
Staph came up and with my first rife treatment for staph my root canal that I had for 6 yrs and never had any pain or trouble with it...went ballistic in just 5 minutes on staph freq. It took a couple weeks of doing staph before I killed it off.
Everytime I rifed staph it throbbed and screamed like crazy and that tooth was totally ticked off.
Thanks for posting your picture with Dr K. It was so strange because both of you looked like what I had imaged you would look.