Clustering spirochetes in a child. Spirochetes cause disease in man. Oral spirochetes have been found in the brains of alzheimers patients, in the plaques of heart disease patients, and are perhaps the link between gum disease and heart attack. The spores of spirochetes have been found in virtually all coronary artery plaques.These spirochetes are microscopically indistinguishable from syphilis or lyme disease spirochetes. Oral spirochetes have been found in the brains of alzheimer's patients. We believe that oral spirochetes are the primary injurious agent in two other chronic diseases that plague man, heart disease and diabetes. These things breed by the trillions in the gingival sulcus and invade into the body by millions moving via the de-epitheliazed gingival sulcus into the blood stream then into cells found along the blood stream. Primarily the endothelial cells lining blood vessels, and the Islets of langerhans cells in the pancreas, as well as the brain.
We have not seen anyone with heart disease or diabetes who are not infected with oral spirochetes. Recent papers have proven the alzeheimers plaques are created by these spirochetes which breed in the crevice between the tooth and the gum and under plaque bacteria. The use of tooth cleaning agents will not remove these spirochetes. The only effective methods we have found is Dakins solution. Vigorous rinses for at least two minutes with Dakins or Dakins in a WaterPic®. The use of the Dakins which is a 20:1 dilution of clorox bleach is by far the most effective technique for killing spirochetes in between the teeth as well as the more accessible areas. Tooth pastes are good for cleaning teeth! But this is a different problem entirely. Spirochetes form spores which require daily disinfection of the crevice between the tooth and gum. The only thing which will dissolve plaque(the vegetative bacteria which cause tooth decay) off a tooth surface without friction is clorox diluted in water at a 20:1 water/clorox ratio. This material is cheap effective and absolutely works but no one can sell it to you for a high price, so not one cent of marketing money will be spent to educate the public! This is tragic in the extreme. We have research grade microscopes to show the spirochetes. The only effective techniques involve using bactericidal materials such as clorox and high concentrations of baking soda... Other things such as hydrogen peroxide, povidone iodine, chlorhexidiene, and table salt have drawbacks in daily use. Tooth pastes are valuable in stopping and treating tooth decay, but flossing and brushing with tooth paste or oral rinses with items such as scope, listerine will not guarantee a kill, and in comparison to clorox are very expensive over a lifetime. Patients wonder if clorox is toxic. While it tastes terrible, it is harmless when diluted to 0.3 percent, that is a 20:1 dilution of 6% clorox. Clorox turns into
table salt in the stomach if swallowed. There will be some initial stinging of the skin in the mouth when first used! That goes away when the skin heals after a few uses. Use at night before going to bed and do not rinse the mouth after. If irritation develops move to mornings. Use at night when saliva flow shuts down will keep the material killing for a longer time when not rinsed out.. Finally, we have tried them all and brushing with copious amounts of baking soda forcing it into the gums and in between the teeth one time daily and then using a WaterPic® with the dilute clorox solution will give the best results. What are those results? Absolutely no leakage of the seal where the tooth come out of the skin. The Gum is a specialized tissue designed to seal the skeleton where it come out thru the skin. The teeth are the only part of the skeleton which is out side the skin... So it cannot heal itself. Use of a good fluoride tooth paste at night will do much to stop tooth decay. Never eating sugar or carbohydrates between meals will assure no tooth decay in those with normal saliva.
Yours in better dental health,
http://www.martinimplants.com
Dr. Douglas M. Martin DDS, FAAID, FAIT, FICOI/ID ABOI/ID.
Hi, I take some white/yellow chunk out between my teeth and add half drop of water, then put under microscope with x400 or x1000. I can see the tinny worm swimming. Would you please let me know what is the name of this worm is. Is this worm good or bad. Because this White/yelow chunk is smelly which cause bad breath. Will i kill this Worm by rinse my mouth with strong wisky such as 50 or 70 degree. Thanks. please reply or send me email on trangdung1@optusnet.com.au
vnyeu 4 months ago
@vnyeu
The bacteria shown are spirochetes. The cheap way to stay healthy is with dilute clorox, which is NaOCl in a 0.3 or 0.15% dilution. Rinse vigorously for two minutes at a time every day.. Start as a child and keep it up for a life time.. Brush with salt NaCl or Na(CO3). Any salt will kill by crenation. Get your teeth cleaned twice a year to get rocks off the teeth. Kill these things with stuff that is cheap and easy to use.. You sure won't find advertising for cheap stuff..
implantdrdm 3 months ago
this video is one of several which are taken on our phase contrast Nikon at about 1200 power. There are some very interesting other videos of oral spirochetes .
Click on subscribe or implantdrdm to see other videos.
implantdrdm 2 years ago
Absolutleley amazing!
Zimplony 2 years ago
Thanks we think so too. Click on the implantdrdm above on the right to see other very interesting videos of oral spirochetosis. Are these creatures causing tertiary spirochetosis with many manifestations such as coronary artery disease, Alzheimer's, maturity onset diabetes? We know good oral hygiene decreases the incidence of heart attack dramatically. Could oral spirochetosis be the source of the injurious agent in heart disease.
implantdrdm 2 years ago
It actually looks like several of these are attacking other (possibly good) bacteria!
SoulSeekerofTruth 2 years ago
These creatures may well be the primary infectrion site of what may well be tertiary spirochetosis with lesions in the coronary, carotid arteries and the aorta. as well as in the brain and pancreas. Personally I believe they form spores in tissue all over the body and begin to become active at death. It may be their number one mode of transmission from animal to animal. There is gum disease in dinosaurs.
implantdrdm
implantdrdm 2 years ago