The Benefits of Minimally Invasive Dentistry
by
Joseph Mercola
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Story at-a-glance
- Early intervention
with minimally invasive dentistry can eliminate 80 percent of
future dental interventions on the vast majority of patients
- By identifying
hypocalcific areas and using a miniature air abrasion tip to clean
out those pits, fissures and grooves, removes the initial decay.
The area is then sealed with glass ionomer. The end result is
that those teeth tend to not decay in the future
- Tooth decay
is primarily driven by the symbiotic relationship between bacteria
and acidity, which creates a pathogenic bioflora in your mouth.
If you’re continually lowering the pH in your mouth, you start
losing calcium, which is necessary for strong healthy teeth. Calcium
deficiency leads to porosity in the teeth, which allows plaque
that has turned pathogenic to attack the tooth more thoroughly
- The three
main components of minimally invasive dentistry comprises dietary
prevention (creating a healthy bioflora in your mouth and body),
dental prophylaxis (baking soda; oil pulling), and minimally invasive
restorations, which will help prevent ever needing more invasive
procedures like root canals, crowns, bridges and implants
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It's very difficult
to achieve high-level physical health if your dental health isn't
effectively addressed. I've been involved with alternatives to regular
dentistry for quite some time. I think many people fail to appreciate
how important dentistry is to our total health.
Most tend
to separate these two components, but both need to be considered
as working in tandem.
Contrary to
conventional dentistry, minimally invasive dentistry, like biological
dentistry, is not about "drilling and filling" creating
an endless loop of revisits and retreating the same tooth again
and again.
Instead, by
using dietary prevention to create a healthy cavity-fighting bioflora
in your mouth; dental prophylaxis such as brushing and irrigating
with baking soda, and oil pulling; combined with minimally invasive
restorations starting as early as possible, you can prevent about
80 percent of future dental problems.
Minimally
Invasive Dentistry A Valuable Aspect of Biological Dentistry
Dr. Tim Rainey
is a true pioneer in biological dentistry, and is a big proponent
of and leader in what's termed "minimally invasive dentistry."
"Basically,
I knew that the way that we were preparing teeth back then was dead
wrong; that you couldn't go in and justify destroying massive amounts
of tooth structure," Dr. Rainey says. "...We
need to be much more conservative."
After dental
school, the training and dogma of which he rebelled against, he
began investigating alternatives to the standard "drill and
fill" dogma. After reading a hallmark article by a Japanese
researcher back in 1977, he began to put everything together:
How tooth
decay actually occurs, what the tooth looks like on the inside,
how the decay looks like, and finally, what could be done to minimize
the damage being done to the tooth while trying to restore it.
"It
took me about until 1983 to really understand what was really going
on within the teeth. I'm talking several years there. I'm talking
about dissecting hundreds, if not thousands, of teeth...
I realized
two things. Number one, we did not even have a rudimentary understanding
of the decay process in the teeth. Number two, everything that we've
been taught about tooth structure and anatomy was just dead wrong.
By 1985,
I had actually published the article on how to address 80 percent
of all decay, which is in the chewing surface of the back teeth.
That's where most decay starts. We had a rather crude rudimentary
way of going in and treating these teeth," he says.
Minimally
Invasive Restorations Can Last a Lifetime
The first
patient he used his newly devised procedure on was the daughter
of one of his class mates from dental school. The girl received
these minimally invasive restorations in 1983 or '84. Today, she
is Dr. Rainey's lead hygienist, and those restorations are still
there, and those teeth have never decayed or broken down.
This is in
stark contrast to what happens with most conventional fillings,
especially if the dentist uses amalgam (about half of which is mercury,
despite being deceptively referred to as "silver filling").
When you drill into the tooth with a high speed drill, and then
stuff amalgam or other incompatible material in there, you can be
almost certain that you will need additional work on that tooth
down the road as the tooth begins to crack and the tooth structure
fails.
"The
average is somewhere around 14 to 15 years before the breakdown
of the first restoration in the tooth and then somewhere around
eight years for the second restoration," Dr. Rainey says.
"Then
you're into the tooth has fractured, you start getting decay in
between the teeth. That's the root. That will destruct your teeth.
Decay starts breaking down the teeth, and then you start getting
into crowns and root canals. Here you have a whole series of manmade
iatrogenic (dentistry-caused) 'disasters,' which fuels the future
generations of dentists. It also fuels 80 percent of what all dental
practice is about, that is repairing previous dentistry."
By using early
diagnosis and early intervention with minimally invasive dentistry,
Dr. Rainey and other dentists trained in his techniques have eliminated
80 percent of future dentistry on the vast majority of their patients
who are privileged to grow up in a practice such as theirs. As someone
who has struggled with my own dental health, this sounds absolutely
extraordinary. That equates to phenomenal savings in terms of money,
pain, and emotional anguish, if you happen to be afraid of the dentist
chair.
"Remember,
there are several other people throughout the world who are now
doing this. It has a very profound effect. We're talking about something
that the evidence of information has been out there approaching
30 years three decades. Dental patients found out about
it like they did in alternative medicine... They seek me out from
all over. We have patients coming in from Canada. We haven't even
counted the number of states; I would say something around 30 states,"
Dr. Rainey says.
"Of
course, there are easier and simpler ways to do dentistry! You start
these kids off very early. You eliminate the decay... and guess
what? They don't have much decay later on. We call it bulletproofing
the teeth; where we go in, identify the defective pit, fissures,
and grooves in the teeth, and clean those out.
There
are several different types of materials that we can use. My preference
is for glass ionomer cement... Not only do those chewing surfaces
on those teeth never decay, but the interproximal areas are gaining
some degree of protection because you're removing the nidus of the
infection, which is the bacteria within the teeth that are causing
decay. You don't have that bolus of xbowel bioactivity there to
lead off into decay."
Understanding
Tooth Structure
The tooth is
covered with a layer of lipoprotein, laden with calcium phosphate
that comes and goes eating and drinking, especially acidic
foodstuffs and beverages, remove it, while saliva puts it back.
Beneath that is an extremely hard and dense layer of enamel, which
is about 0.2 millimeters, or 200-400 microns thick. Inside of that
hard layer, the tooth structure becomes much softer. These parts
all form the structural integrity of the tooth.
When you bite
down on the tooth, the stress is transferred through the entire
tooth down into the root, which deforms slightly. This is part of
its natural stress-relieving mechanism. During the formation of
the tooth can form little pits, fissures and grooves that may be
hypocalcific a defect that causes the enamel to be softer
than normal and susceptible to decay.
"In
the ideal world, you do not have decay start down in these pits
and fissures, because you have a natural oil-based organic plug
that seals that tooth," Dr. Rainey explains. "However,
in the real world what happens is as these teeth are finalizing
development, you'll get what we call 'hypocalcified enamel.' Now,
if you put acid in that area, then you start getting a calcium deficit.
That's the beginning of decay in teeth."
He identifies
those areas, and using a miniature air abrasion tip that is very
precise and focused, cleans out those pits, fissures and grooves.
This removes the initial decay. Then he seals it with glass ionomer.
The end result is that those teeth tend to not decay in the future.
Why Decay
Occurs
Tooth decay
is primarily driven by the symbiotic relationship between bacteria
and acidity, which creates a pathogenic bioflora in your mouth.
If you're continually lowering the pH in your mouth, you start losing
calcium, which is necessary for strong healthy teeth. Calcium deficiency
leads to porosity in the teeth, which allows plaque that has turned
pathogenic to attack the tooth more thoroughly. Once certain types
of bacteria are able to penetrate the enamel, they put out enzymes
that begin to break down the collagen of the inner structure of
the tooth.
"That's
where you get cavitation, which is the loss of tooth structure to
the point where you have a hole in that tooth," Dr. Rainey
explains.
One of the
most important things Dr. Rainey instructs his patients to do is
to use nothing but baking soda on their teeth at night.
"The
pathogenic bacteria must have an acidic environment. Then you have
the bacteria the probiotic bacteria that live in
a neutral environment. You're going to have X number of bacteria
regardless of what you do. So, why not promote the non-pathogenic
bacteria by neutralizing the acidity with baking soda at night,
which has profound effects on the overall oral health of the individual?"
Dr. Rainey says.
You can brush
with it, use it as a mouth rinse, and even dissolve a little in
the water you use in your WaterPik or HydroFloss.
- To brush:
Wet your toothbrush and dip it into the baking soda. Brush as
usual. Your teeth should feel smooth when finished
- To rinse:
About a teaspoon in a small glass of water is sufficient. Just
swish it around in your mouth and spit out
- To floss:
Dissolve a small amount of baking soda in water and fill your
irrigation instrument. Make sure not to let it dry inside your
water pik as it will cause buildup and eventually render the tool
useless. So, always keep water in your irrigation tool, and instead
of storing it standing up, store it upside-down in a glass of
baking soda and water, as the baking soda will prevent harmful
bacteria from proliferating. Once a week, drain it all out and
rinse it thoroughly with water
In the mornings,
you could use toothpaste containing calcium and phosphate salts,
or even hydroxyapatite, which can help remineralize your teeth.
"Since
the Pro-Enamel [toothpaste], I've believed that almost all of the
toothpastes out there now have calcium of some form in them. The
magic is the calcium phosphate. You want those present, so they
can precipitate back into the teeth as amorphous hydroxyapatite...
You're rebuilding an amorphous crystal of enamel, because of all
the interactions of the enzymes, calcium, phosphate, and everything
else that goes on within your mouth.
Where you
really mess this up is by getting it too acidic. That's where the
baking soda comes in.
We use
it in our cancer patients, where they have a real deficit of calcium
and phosphate in their saliva people who have problems. The
brand name of it, as a prescription item, is called Caphoso®.
You actually get it in a calcium solution, a phosphate salt solution.
You mix those together, and then you rinse with them." That's
the building block of enamel, and what it takes to remineralize
enamel.
Promote Beneficial
Oral Bacteria with Fermented Foods
To promote
a beneficial oral bioflora he also recommends taking Evora tablets
while you're trying to change the bacterial balance in your mouth.
Eating fermented foods, such as cultured yoghurt made from raw organic
milk (AVOID store-bought yoghurts as they are worthless in terms
of probiotics. Most are loaded with sugars and other detrimental
ingredients, and all of them are pasteurized), or fermented
vegetables, which you can easily and inexpensively make at home.
According
to Dr. Rainey, any type of probiotics will naturally help get rid
of harmful Strep mutans. This includes Lactobacillus and bacteria
that are bioactive in high concentrations of lactic acid.
To Pull or
Not to Pull...
Another interesting
technique that can help improve your oral health is oil pulling.
The technique is thousands of years old, and it's an ancient Ayurvedic
Indian tradition. To perform it, you vigorously swish an oil in
your mouth, "pulling" it between your teeth for 20-30
minutes. You can use a number of oils for this, but sesame, sunflower
or coconut oil are commonly used. Dr. Rainey is also working extensively
with ozonated oils.
Oil pulling
is thought to remove pathogenic bacteria, improve oral hygiene,
and help detoxify your system. Dr. Rainey agrees the technique can
be beneficial. A drawback is that it is time consuming. You need
to go at it for quite some time in order to get results. It's not
like swishing with mouthwash for 30 seconds. Ideally, you'll want
to reach close to 30 minutes.
The Three
Main Components of Minimally Invasive Dentistry
Contrary to
conventional dentistry, minimally invasive dentistry, like biological
dentistry, is not about "drilling and filling" creating
an endless loop of revisits and fixing old dental work until there's
nothing left to work with. It comprises three main components:
- Dietary
prevention (creating a healthy bioflora in your mouth and body)
- Dental prophylaxis
(baking soda; oil pulling)
- Minimally
invasive restorations
As for dental
prophylaxis, the simplest thing is just adding baking soda to your
nightly oral hygiene. Ideally, add it to your dental irrigator,
and brush with it. You can also use oil pulling in conjunction with
this. They're not mutually exclusive. You can combine the two, because
it will provide a sort of organic matrix plug, which helps combat
dental decay. And ultimately, you want to change the bioflora in
your mouth, which is done through your diet. Fermented foods are
key. A high-quality probiotic supplement may suffice if you really
cannot stand fermented foods. I urge you to at least try some fermented
veggies though, as they are, for most people, the most palatable.
I think they're delicious!
The next step,
(where, ideally, you'd start your kids off) would be to see a dentist
trained in minimally invasive dentistry. Kids treated with the NovaMin
or baking soda air abrasion process to clean the pits and fissures
and then seal them with glass ionomer, receive significant protection
against future decay.
How to Find
a Biological and Minimally Invasive Dentist
At present,
there are a number of dentists trained in Dr. Rainey's techniques.
Several of them are in California and Florida. There's also one
in Beirut, Lebanon, and in New Zealand. To locate a qualified dentist,
you can contact Dr. Rainey's office at www.jtimrainey.com,
or call 361-526-4695.
If there's
no minimally invasive dentistry practice in your area, or within
reasonable travel distance, the following links can help you to
find a mercury-free, biological dentist. These may not be trained
in Dr. Rainey's minimally invasive dentistry technique, but are
trained to treat your oral and physical health as a cohesive whole.
If you're considering removing amalgam, you also need to make sure
it's done by biological dentist that's been properly trained to
do it safely, as removing amalgam can lead to severe and acute mercury
poisoning:
February
4, 2013
Copyright ©
2013 Dr. Joseph Mercola
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