The.Cure.For.All.Advanced.Cancers

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DENTAL WORK

Arichega Gum Cleaning


The second task after extracting your teeth, and cleaning
cavitations is to remove imbedded amalgam. This procedure has
been developed by Dr. Benjamin Arichega of Mexico. Each
quadrant of your mouth needs an amalgam cleanup. The top of
the gum line will be gray from absorbed mercury. It is easiest
for you to have this done while extractions are being done. The
dentist begins by cutting a straight line on top of the bony ridge
of the jaw where teeth once were.
Next, he/she snips away^1 / 8 inch (3 mm) of the gum on each
side of the incision. A ribbon,^1 / 8 inch wide and extending from
the wisdom teeth to the closest front tooth is discarded. The re-
maining gum tissue stretches over the top easily and is sutured
over. Surprisingly, the new gum tissue heals much faster than
the old, mercury-saturated gums. You can count on your gums
being healed in two to three days. The new gum tissue produces
a strong even union, without small holes where food can get
trapped. We call it the Arichega technique, after the oral sur-
geon who invented it. While the dentist is cutting out mercury-
drenched gum tissue, the exposed bone can be cleaned of amal-
gam bits that are easy to spot now.


Dental Aftercare


One of the purposes of doing this dental clean-up is to kill
all Clostridium bacteria that have invaded the deeper regions of
the jaw bone after being spawned in the decaying teeth and
crevices under tooth fillings. From here they colonize your tu-
mors as well as the bowel.
Antibiotics are not to be relied upon by a cancer patient un-
dergoing dental work because antibiotics only inhibit the bacte-
ria until they die or your immune system takes over. In a cancer
patient, this immune response may never happen. And as soon
as the antibiotic is stopped a new, more serious, bacterium can
surface to bewilder and defy everybody.

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