Anonymous ID: 56640e Nov. 11, 2023, 1:16 a.m. No.19897290   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7294 >>7295 >>7297 >>7298

>>19897231 (You)

 

brush with baking soda

 

rinse and gargle with whiskey

 

swallow it rather than expectorate

 

the dead germs will innoculate you

 

the real organic way to vax yourself

 

kek

 

NaOCl solution for the debridement and irrigation of root canals during and after instrumentation.

https://vistaapex.com/product/sodium-hypochlorite-3-or-6/?attribute_pa_percentage=6&attribute_pa_package-configuration=16oz-480ml-bottle&srsltid=AfmBOoryWtPUBEjaSQikSODRZSpndlrQUS1Y4i-ZjWGv5rx3iaWPnCckM50

Convenient and AsepticThe recipe for the concentrate bleach(8.25%) is 1 teaspoon of bleach to 2/3 cup of water.

Same routine: Mix gently and swish for 30 seconds and spit out. Do this 2 times a week.

I sell a purer regular bleach(6%) at the office. This brand is only sold to dentists. I like it because it does not have all the detergents, perfumes, softeners, etc…

Most dentists can order this brand (by Vista Dental Products) for you.

Blessings,

Rev. Dr. Stephen A. Lawrence

 

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/305400356_Sodium_hypochlorite_dilute_chlorine_bleach_oral_rinse_in_patient_self-care

https://www.rese

 

>>19897229

 

Bad gut biome won't help matters either, but yep yep. Everything goes back to chronic inflammation as I understand it. Saturated fat ain't bad either kek. Food Pyramid is upside-down.

 

>>19897232

 

I'd guess it has to do with existing level of bodily inflammation. Anon is considered high-risk cuz genetics, has high cholesterol cuz genetics, but all inflammation markers are normal, not even in pre-diabetic range…"oh anon, you should really be on a statin." Hell fucking no. I don't always feel healthy, but I'm not risking precipitating anything with meds either.

 

inflammation is the biggie…print this off for your Doctor…

 

Physicians’ Experiences as Patients with Statin Side Effects: A Case Series:

This is the first analysis to address the experience of physicians themselves affected by adverse effects (AEs) of statin medications, encompassing muscle, neuropathic, cognitive, and behavioral AEs.

The impact of statin AEs in physicians can be profound, professionally and personally, in some cases requiring major professional modification or early retirement.

Poor awareness of statin problems by medical providers, and low receptiveness to reports of such problems, can extend even to patients when they themselves are physicians.

 

Physicians' Experiences as Patients with Statin Side Effects: A Case Series

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5316517/

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28217821/

Anonymous ID: 56640e Nov. 11, 2023, 1:25 a.m. No.19897300   🗄️.is 🔗kun

However, in the fine print we learn that…

 

Lipitor “has not been shown to prevent heart disease or heart attacks”!

Anonymous ID: 56640e Nov. 11, 2023, 1:36 a.m. No.19897325   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7335 >>7569 >>7688 >>8004

>>19897298

I thought of that, it makes sense!

 

Oh, some endontists put in mini titanium implants that are not even screwed into the bone and break through the gums years later after bone shifts.

 

Investigation reveals nearly 3 million reports of problems with dental implants

 

https://www.kold.com/2021/11/09/investigation-reveals-nearly-3-million-reports-problems-with-dental-implants/

 

Investigation reveals nearly 3 million reports of problems with dental implants

 

Nearly 3 million reports of problems

A surge of reports of problems with dental implants may have remained almost impossible to find if it wasn’t for a former FDA data analyst. After leaving the FDA, Madris Kinard started Device Events. Her company specializes in searching through data in the FDA’s MAUDE database, which contains reports of the problems with medical devices reported to the FDA. MAUDE stands for Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience.

 

MAUDE can be cumbersome and difficult to search, producing only 500 reports at a time. Kinard’s software sorts through millions of reports in seconds, allowing her to compile data that may take other researchers weeks to gather. Searching MAUDE, Kinard discovered dental implants have nearly 3 million reports of problems, more than any other medical device.

 

Kinard says the public has not been provided enough information on risks associated with dental implants. “Anybody who had looked at adverse events or problem reports with the devices over the last 20 to 25 years would have thought that were almost no problem with dental implants,” she said.

 

Reports of problems flew under the radar for decades, partly due to the fact the FDA had two separate systems for reporting problems. From 1995 to 2018, the MAUDE database received more than 58,000 reports of problems with dental implants. Those reports were available to the public. The relatively small number of reports each year created the appearance problems were rare.

 

A second system called Alternative Summary Reporting existed for manufacturers to report problems. The information in the ASRs was not publicly available. During the same time frame from 1995 to 2018, manufacturers reported more than 2.1 million problems with dental implants that were kept hidden. In an effort to create more transparency, in 2018, the FDA ended the use of ASRs and released decades of data. See Kris Pickel’s previous investigation on the FDA’s 2019 data dump.

 

Sorting through MAUDE, Kinard discovered reports of problems are currently surging. In 2018, the last year ASRs were used, there were less than 13,000 reports of problems with dental devices. In the past three years, possibly due to more awareness, reports have increased by more than 100,000 each year. In the first nine months of 2021, the FDA received more than 357,000 reports of problems with dental implants.

 

Kinard’s research also reveals out of the more than 2.9 million reports of problems, 88% are implants failing immediately or over time. A failure results in the patient losing the implant.

 

Potential underreporting

The FDA attributes the increase in reports of problems, in part, to more people getting dental implants. Nearly 3 million reports may sound surprising, but the true number of problems with dental implants could be even higher. FDA spokeswoman Stephanie Caccomo says MAUDE is important for detecting safety issues with medical devices, but it is only one of the tools used and has limitations. The database relies on health care professionals, patients and industry representatives taking the initiative to file the reports, which opens up “the potential submission of incomplete, inaccurate, untimely, unverified or biased data,” according to Caccomo.

 

Caccomo also notes MAUDE does not provide an accurate account of the rate of failure for a device “due to potential underreporting of events and lack of information about the frequency of device use.”

Anonymous ID: 56640e Nov. 11, 2023, 1:42 a.m. No.19897335   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19897325

Risk factors

Some advertisements claim dental implants have success rates as high as 98%. What’s not revealed is that percentage is based on a study acknowledging the clinical trial does not reflect real-life situations. The study had less than 200 patients who were all in good health and were “optimal candidates for dental implants.” A patient’s health can play a key role in the success or failure of an implant and the loss of natural teeth can sometimes be tied to existing health issues.

 

Other studies examining factors that may contribute to a patient having problems with implants include:

 

Being over 60 years old.

Bone density.

Implant size and placement.

Gum disease.

Smoking.

Diabetes.

Neck and head radiation.

Hormone replace therapy.

There appears to be no way to accurately calculate the overall success or failure rate of dental implants. No agency or organization tracks how many dental implants are placed annually. In addition, none of the more than two dozen dental implant manufacturers contacted for this investigation were willing to answer questions.

 

FDA creates website

If you turn on the television, there is a good chance you will see commercials touting the benefits of dental implants. Patient testimonials include glowing stories of new teeth transforming their smiles, giving them confidence, and improving their lives. With any medical procedure, patients are told to be informed but reliable information on the risks and complications associated with dental implants is difficult to find.

 

The FDA regulates medical devices. The agency’s website includes pages detailing warnings for everything from hip and breast implants to blood glucose monitoring. Until recently, warnings for dental implants fell under a generic page titled “Implants and Prosthetics.” The webpage does not mention the words “dental implants.”

 

After the FDA was presented with the information in this investigation, including the increasing number of reports of problems in the agency’s MAUDE database, the FDA reacted within a matter of weeks, creating a webpage dedicated to the benefits and risks of dental implants titled: Dental Implants: What You Should Know.

 

The website encourages people who experience problems to file a voluntary report through MedWatch but does not alert the public to the millions of issues already reported. Kinard says it’s past time for the FDA to provide stronger warnings on the surging number of implant failures. “It’s very concerning to me. I’m not sure why the FDA hasn’t put out any kind of notification to patients and physicians,” says Kinard.

 

What’s in your dental implant?

The answer to that question is, you don’t know. You can find out more about what’s in your snack than what’s in your dental implant. The FDA requires ingredients in food to be listed. Dental implants don’t require the same transparency. To get on the market, dental implant manufacturers only have to show their device is “similar to a previously approved product.”

 

In documentation provided to the FDA, dental implant manufacturers can list general materials such as titanium alloys. An alloy is a mixture of metals. However, the other metals are not revealed. This means you can learn more about the ingredients in a frozen burrito by reading the packaging than what’s in a medical device you implant in your body.

 

Dr. Dirk Duddeck runs the Clean Implant Foundation, a laboratory in Berlin accredited by the German government that analyzes dental implants looking for contaminants.

 

He says over the past few years, using a cleanroom to avoid being the source of contamination, he’s analyzed more than 300 different dental implants and found contamination on roughly three out 10 implants that are supposed to be sterile. Contaminants, according to Duddeck, include everything from toxic chemicals used in production to tiny metal particles including iron, chromium, nickel, tungsten, copper and tin. Duddeck details his research in a video:

 

According to Duddeck, the contamination may lead to the body rejecting the implants as it tries to get rid of the particles.

 

Metal allergies

Prior to Peters getting her dental implants, she says she told the dentist she was allergic to some metals but was told people can’t be allergic to titanium.

Anonymous ID: 56640e Nov. 11, 2023, 1:48 a.m. No.19897345   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7347

>>19897306

 

I remember back, not so long ago…popping tide pods was the libatard trend, snorting condoms and licking toilet bowls that had "fuck Trump" written on them. Curious what the new liberal fucktard trend will be in 2024 when Trump wins again!