PART TWO: GETTING WELL AGAIN
Dr. J: Since you are now extracting mercury-filled teeth in-
stead of refilling them with plastic, do you use any special pre-
cautions?
Dr. C: Extractions should be done carefully, so the amal-
gam doesn’t break up, letting little pieces get away to lodge in
crevices in the gums or bone or the hole itself. In Mexico we
routinely refer the patient to an oral surgeon for extractions and
to a dentist for air abrasion cleaning or temporary cement fill-
ings.
Dr. J: No dentist in the US would extract a tooth just be-
cause it has a large amalgam filling in it.
Dr. C: The amalgam is very toxic. The available plastic re-
placements are toxic, too. But to prove this, you would need
Syncrometer technology, searching for metals in the bone mar-
row, spleen, thymus, lymph nodes. That’s where it’s killing you
by blocking iron metabolism. It doesn’t chelate out. Your
choice is to succumb to illness or extract. Extractions are life-
saving. Patients will need to go to foreign countries for their
dental work.
Dr. J: How could you convince a seriously ill patient to do
that?
Dr. C: Words are not convincing so I don’t try too hard.
But if an MS patient who is disabled sees another MS patient
gain ground after tooth extraction it is quite convincing. The
results come so quickly that there is no argument. Likewise, for
the cancer or AIDS patient. They may be concerned about the
“stress” on their bodies from extractions. But when they see
similar patients start to eat again, get dressed or go for a walk
within days after getting their extractions, it doesn’t take per-
suasion. It’s seeing the miraculous recovery of others in the
same hopeless situation that’s convincing. In fact, I have heard
patients say, “Who needs their own teeth in a wooden box?”
Dr. J: What percentage of patients give such a dramatic re-
sponse?