PART TWO: GETTING WELL AGAIN
- Baker’s yeast cakes (keep refrigerated) ½ cake once a
day with breakfast. - Raw garlic, one clove a day, or germanium (carboxyethyl
germanium sesquioxide only, see Sources) one a day. - Hot water.
Acquire these before your dental appointment. Practice us-
ing the water pick and making the colloidal silver. The most
important of all these is the hot water!
The immune power of your arterial blood is much greater
than in your veins. How can you bring arterial blood into the
jaw area to heal it faster after dental work? Simply by hot-
packing it from the start!
The first day of dental work is critical. If you miss this, a
massive spread of infection can occur because the mouth is al-
ways a “den of bacteria,” and the abscessed teeth are
themselves the source. As soon as you get home from the
dentist you need to bathe your mouth with hot water. The heat
brings in arterial blood. Swish gently. Keep the cotton plug in
place for you to bite down on and reduce bleeding, even while
swishing. Don’t suction the water around your mouth, you
could dislodge the clot that needs to form in the socket. Gently
move the hot water about your mouth. At the same time apply a
hot pack to the outside of your face where the dental work was
done. Wring a wash cloth out of the hottest water you can
endure. Or fill a plastic baggie halfway with hot water, zipping
it shut securely. Do this for 30 minutes four times a day, for a
few days. Then three times a day for a week—even when there
is no pain. Don’t suck liquids through a straw for 24 hours; the
sucking force is especially risky, it could dislodge the healing
clot. Don’t allow your tongue to suck the wound site, either;
and don’t put fingers in your mouth.
As the anesthetic wears off there will be very little pain if
the bacteria in the tooth sites have been killed. But you could