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Old 01-18-2013, 09:06 AM
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Bryanna Bryanna is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 4,624
15 yr Member
Bryanna Bryanna is offline
Grand Magnate
Bryanna's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 4,624
15 yr Member
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Alan,

When a dentist says this root canal will be %%% effective or this will cure your infection.... the translation of that is... this is a temporary measure to "retain" an infected/inflamed tooth for an undisclosed amount of time. The procedure actually causes inflammation and trauma to the tooth and surrounding periodontal ligament, etc .... if the tooth eventually calms down from the procedure, it is considered to be successful. It is just a matter of time before symptoms show again and they may at that point actually involve a nearby tooth. Often times, as in your case, the symptoms are silent until the bacteria has progressed passed the tooth into the bone and/or show up on an x-ray, the tooth feels sore or loose, the tooth discolors or swelling occurs.

My whole point in sharing this information with you and whomever else is reading this is simply to make it clear that the longer these teeth are present, the more deterioration will occur making replacement of them more complicated and more expensive. All dental offices see this exact thing every day and yet patients are rarely, rarely, given enough information to make an informed decision. The option of extraction and replacement is briefly mentioned, if at all, and once the patient says... "but I want to keep my tooth"... the discussion about removal goes no further.

On the health side of all of this.... all of our teeth correlate with other areas/organs of our body. Here is a link to show those correlations...one at a time click on the teeth on the chart that have root canals and see what areas these teeth are directly associated with....
http://naturaldentistry.us/holistic-...nitas-dentist/

My intention is not to push you in any direction, just to give you the opportunity to be well informed.

All the best to you!
Bryanna



Quote:
Originally Posted by alan.duda View Post
Thanks for the response Bryanna!

I'm glad the roughness is normal from the Cavit in the short term.

As far as the long term goes, it seems like yanking the dead teeth altogether and going for implants is the safest route. My dentist did mention that this was an option but said root canal would be 90-95% effective and I'd get to keep my teeth. I guess I didn't realize that root canal is just prolonging the inevitable. If things continue to give me trouble over the next few months I'll go for the dental implants before it's too late.

Thanks so much for the help!

Alan
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"Thanks for this!" says:
alan.duda (01-18-2013)