Anonymous wrote:The Dr Peter McCullough interview with Dr Ellie https://www.americaoutloud.news/power-of-xylitol-in-dentistry/
As a senior, I found her gum health ideas most interesting. But she also advocates her methods for pregnant moms and enfants to completely prevent cavities and poor oral health from the start which is very inexpensive because it only requires xylitol at that early stage. Very persuasive.
Intro to above link https://www.americaoutloud.news/natural-approaches-to-dentistry/
https://drellie.com/about-2/ also check out the Q&A’s
https://drellie.com/complete-mouth-care-system/ Expensive, but so is standard dentistry.
Anonymous wrote:Seems easier just to floss.
Anonymous wrote:Someone on the flossing thread mentioned this dentist's web page and I checked it out.
http://www.drellie.com/
It seems sensible to me... and she doesn't seem like she is just trying to sell a bunch of her own special products or anything. She's recommending certain types of name brand products, mostly, except she does sell her own brand of xylitol gum and mints I guess.
I googled around to see if people think she is a quack but mostly all I can find is people complaining that she says flossing isn't really that necessary/backed in evidence...which now it turns out might be correct.
She seems to say that sometimes cavities can be healed/reverse themselves... which I'd think was quackery, except I had two small cavities once that I never got around to filling (as an adult) and a year later we did xrays and they weren't there anymore (or weren't big enough to need filling) -- same dentist. So I wonder about that too!
Anyhow, I was wondering if other people here besides the one poster who linked to her have tried or used her system, and what you think of it. Any reasons NOT to try it?
She says xylitol is SUPER useful in preventing cavities and I never even heard about it. My daughter gets cavities all the time despite pretty good attention to oral hygiene so I am looking for better ways to help her.
When a tooth is exposed to acid frequently -- for example, if you eat or drink often, especially foods or drinks containing sugar and starches -- the repeated cycles of acid attacks cause the enamel to continue to lose minerals. A white spot may appear where minerals have been lost. This is a sign of early decay.
Tooth decay can be stopped or reversed at this point. Enamel can repair itself by using minerals from saliva, and fluoride from toothpaste or other sources.
But if the tooth decay process continues, more minerals are lost. Over time, the enamel is weakened and destroyed, forming a cavity. A cavity is permanent damage that a dentist has to repair with a filling.