Dental Care - Teeth re-enamalize naturally

DENTAL CARE

and Dental Health

TEETH re-enamalize naturally

A summary of a letter from Gerard F. Judd, Ph.D., Chemist, Researcher for 18 years and Professor of Chemistry for 33 years.

April 2002

We can take care of our own teeth as follows:

1. Tooth cavities are caused by acids. Rinsing after each meal with dilute acid and avoid cavities.

2. Sugar does not cause cavities.

3. Bacteria cannot damage the enamel (calcium hydroxy phosphate).

4. Teeth reenamalize when clean and free of fluorde and gliserine.

TO MAKE TEETH CLEAN ONE BRUSHES WITH ANY BAR SOAP.

Soap washes off in just 2 rinses. What about toothpastes? Glycerine in all tooth pastes is so sticky that it takes 27 washes to get it off. Teeth brushed with any toothpaste are coated with a film and CANNOT PROPERLY REENAMELIZE.

5. Calcium and phosphate in the diet helps to reenamelize the teeth, but only when they are clean. Bar soap does a perfect job in cleaning the surface.

6. Gums can be cleaned and disinfected by brushing with any bar soap.

7. Plaque, a poorly formed crystal stuck to the bottom of the enamel, is prevented and eventually removed by brushing with bar soap.

8. Prevention of plaque retards gum pockets. GUM POCKETS are formed as the plaque pushes the gums away from the teeth. GUM POCKETS, from 1 to 8 mm deep, ARE ALSO FORMED BY FLUORIDE, WHICH SEVERS THE PROTEIN MOLECULES ADHERING THE GUMS TO THE TEETH. SOAP PREVENTS GINGIVITIS caused by bacteria which is lodged in the gum pockets.

9. VITAMIN C AND PHOSPHATE help knit the gums back to the teeth.

Pressing against the gums with fingers forces adhesive materials from the gums onto the teeth, which helps the process. Abscesses can be offset by holding Cepacol (14% alcohol) in the mouth 5 minutes.

11. REMOVAL OF FLUORIDE FROM DRINKING WATER, PASTES OR GELS SAVES THE ENZYME ADENOSINE DIPHOSPHATASE so it can deliver phosphate to calcium at the tooth surface, RESULTING IN A BEAUTIFUL, SEMI-FLEXIBLE ENAMEL.

12.GUMS CAN BE RECONNECTED TO THE TEETH BY TAKING VITAMIN C (ASCORBIC ACID) (1 tsp) with Arm and Hammer baking soda (1/2 tsp) in 1 inch of water, letting it fizz and then diluting to 1/2 to 1 cup with water, then drinking.

The resulting SODIUM ASCORBATE is non-acid, very pure and a thousand times more soluble than vitamin C.

SODIUM ASCORBATE IS MORE REACTIVE THAN ASCORBIC ACID (C) in building connective tissue and antibody structures and more effective in killing some viruses and bacteria.

13. Receding gums and plaque are ended when soap is used for brushing and VITAMIN C IS TAKEN DAILY AS DESCRIBED IN #12.

14. Do not consume as many acid foods, have no fluoride in the drinking water, have regular meals rather than sipping acid drinks all day, have more calcium and phosphate in the diet, and have fewer dentists to WORK ON your teeth.

15. FLUORIDE in water at I part per million INCREASED TOOTH CAVITIES in four large reliable studies 7.22.45 and 10% (average 21 %). The reason far these increases has to do with adenosine diphosphatase being destroyed by fluoride and CALCIUM FLUORIDE slipping into the enamel, and this IS ALIEN TO THE TOOTH COMPOSITE AND MAKES THE ENAMEL WEAK, BRITTLE AND DISCOLORED.

21. THE HEALTH OF TEETH WILL INCREASE TO BE VERY NEARLY PERFECT if the regimen of WATER RINSING, SOAP BRUSHING AND TAKING CALCIUM, PHOSPHATE AND VITAMIN C IN THE DIET is implemented.

29. Methyl mercury formed from amalgams in the body is deadly. It causes brain disease. Fillings made of quartzite and epoxy are a safe substitute.

31. Keep the teeth moist. Teeth that are dry crack. If you chew ice, teeth may crumble. Teeth do have a breaking strength.

Respectfully yours,

Gerard F. Judd, Ph.D. Professor Emeritus, Chemistry

PARTIAL CREDENTIALS OF DR JUDD -- October 24, 2002 -- 6615 W

Lupine, Glendale AZ 85304

1. Ph.D. from Purdue University.

2. Researcher in industry: 18 yrs.

3. Prof of chemistry: 33 yrs; retired professor emeritus.

4. Fluoride laboratory studies: Linde, Purdue, Wright Field and Phoenix College, 13 yrs.

5. Author, revised: Good Teeth Birth to Death, 117 pp. July 1997.

6. Author, revised: Chemistry, Its Uses In Everyday Life, 305 pp. July 1997.

7. Author, Workbook, Self Quizzes and Laboratory Assignments for Chemistry, Its Uses In Everyday Life, July 16, 1997.

8. Author, Chemical Hygiene Plan, 89 pp, 4-23-1998.

9. Speaker, writer, radio host, bookseller, age 79, continuing October 24, 2002.

10. Fighter for truth in practical uses of chemistry.

Human Body