Root canal teeth are toxic and have the potential to devastate your health
(media.conspiracies.win)
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You won't find these images pretty much anywhere else on the internet. The first one I found in a very expensive and rare book written in 1940 called death and dentistry. The second I found randomly on reddit one day. It is a tooth root under a high powered CT scanner. You can see the complexity of the root system.
What does this mean? When a tooth dies they are supposed to remove all the dead tissue, disinfect it and and seal it up. Well due to the complexity of the root system removal of all the necrotic and dead material is basically impossible, as is filling and sealing the end of the tooth properly. But further than that, anaerobic bacteria will grow and thrive in the dentin tubules. It basically means a tooth turns into a toxic waste factory.
Further reading:
https://www.amazon.com/Root-Canal-Cover-George-Meinig/dp/0916764095
https://educate-yourself.org/cn/Root-Canal-Cover-Up-1996-George-Meinig.pdf
Further watching:
https://youtu.be/xRrlgYqtDjM
This is pretty funny...
When I was in grad school, I went to a friend's parents house for a couple of summer parties.
My friend's father was one of the chiefs of surgery at Johns Hopkins. His mother was an administrator there. Needless to say, their place was pretty nice. His father bought and rebuilt Model T and other early model Fords. So that was cool to see.
Anyhow, I can't swim, and my friends were mainly hanging out in the water, drinking, water skiing, stuff like that one time, and I just was kinda meandering around.
So, I ended up hanging out indoors a bit, and I'm pretty sure that my friend's father had that exact book (Death and Dentistry) on his coffee table.
I read through it, and I was shocked. The book was WAY out of place with his other reading material, too, which is why it attracted my attention (it is a pretty small book).
I talked to his father about it, and got him to admit that tooth removal is generally the way to go, for most situations. Obviously resin fillings are better than mercury amalgam, but they aren't nearly as durable.
I've opted to have teeth removed every time I've had a major issue, and I haven't even gotten implants LOL. Your teeth will adjust fine, and chewing is no issue. Now if it is an issue, or it's a noticeable tooth, then of course implants are probably the way to go.
My last dentist even stated that the last big general dentist meeting he went to, there was a marked shift in the number of dentists who were moving away from root canals and crowns entirely.
My current dentist still does crowns, but generally pushes for implants. Crowns seem like a cheaper option, but if you talk to people that have crowns, there's very often issues, more often than dentists will tell you up front.
It depends. My mom has a crown she has had replaced three or four times now. I know, because she tells me about it, a lot. LOL
My brother has a bridge as well (due to radiation damage to his teeth), and his crowns are fine. Still, there is a major difference between 10 years and 50 years of having crowns.