Effective
Non-Drug Non-Surgical Solutions for Chronic Illnesses
ROOT
CANALS POSE HEALTH THREAT
AN
INTERVIEW WITH
GEORGE
MEINIG, D.D.S.
By
Dr. Joseph Mercola
Dr.
Meinig brings a most curious perspective to an expose of latent dangers of root
canal therapy — fifty years ago he was one of the founders of the American
Association of Endodontists (root canal specialists)! So he’s filled his share
of root canals. And when he wasn’t filling canals himself, he was teaching the
technique to dentists across the country at weekend seminars and clinics. About
two years ago, having recently retired, he decided to read all 1174 pages of the
detailed research of Dr. Weston Price, (D.D.S). Dr. Meinig was startled and
shocked. Here was valid documentation of systemic illnesses resulting from
latent infections lingering in filled roots. He has since written a book,
“Root Canal Cover-Up EXPOSED — Many Illnesses Result,” and is devoting
himself to radio, TV, and personal appearances before groups in an attempt to
blow the whistle and alert the public.
JM Please explain what the problem is with root canal therapy.
GM First, let me note that my book is based on Dr. Weston Price’s
twenty-five years of careful, impeccable research. He led a 60-man team of
researchers whose findings —suppressed until now — rank right up there with
the greatest medical discoveries of all time. This is not the usual medical
story of a prolonged search for the difficult-to-find causative agent of some
devastating disease. Rather, it’s the story of how a “cast of millions”
(of bacteria) becomes entrenched inside the structure of teeth and end up
causing the largest number of diseases ever traced to a single source.
JM What diseases? Can you give us some examples?
GM Yes, a high percentage of chronic degenerative diseases can
originate from root filled teeth. The most frequent were heart and circulatory
diseases and he found 16 different causative agents for these. The next most
common diseases were those of the joints, arthritis and rheumatism. In third
place — but almost tied for second — were diseases of the brain and nervous
system. After that, any disease you can name might (and in some cases has) come
from root filled teeth.
Let me tell you about the research itself. Dr. Price
undertook his investigations in 1900. He continued until 1925, and published his
work in two volumes in 1923. In 1915 the National Dental Association (which
changed its name a few years later to The American Dental Association) was so
impressed with his work that they appointed Dr. Price their first Research
Director. His Advisory Board read like a Who’s Who in medicine and dentistry
for that era. They represented the fields of bacteriology, pathology,
rheumatology, surgery, chemistry, and cardiology.
At one point in his writings Dr. Price made this
observation: “Dr. Frank Billings (M.D.), probably more than any other American
internist, is due credit for the early recognition of the importance of
streptococcal focal infections in systemic involvements.”
What’s really unfortunate here is that very valuable
information was covered up and totally buried some 70 years ago by a minority
group of autocratic doctors who just didn’t believe or couldn’t grasp —
the focal infection theory.
JM What is the “focal infection” theory?
GM This states that germs from a central focal infection — such as
teeth, teeth roots, inflamed gum tissues, or maybe tonsils — metastasize to
hearts, eyes, lungs, kidneys, or other organs, glands and tissues, establishing
new areas of the same infection. Hardly theory any more, this has been proven
and demonstrated many times over. It’s 100% accepted today. But it was
revolutionary thinking during World War I days, and the early 1920’s!
Today, both patients and physicians have been “brain
washed” to think that infections are less serious because we now have
antibiotics. Well, yes and no. In the case of root-filled teeth, the no
longer-living tooth lacks a blood supply to its interior. So circulating
antibiotics don’t faze the bacteria living there because they can’t get at
them.
JM You’re assuming that ALL root-filled teeth harbor bacteria
and/or other infective agents?
GM Yes. No matter what material or technique is used — and this is
just as true today — the root filling shrinks minutely, perhaps
microscopically. Further, and this is key, the bulk of solid appearing teeth,
called the dentin, actually consists of miles of tiny tubules. Microscopic
organisms lurking in the maze of tubules simply migrate into the interior of the
tooth and set up housekeeping. A filled root seems to be a favorite spot to
start a new colony.
One of the things that makes this difficult to understand is
that large, relatively harmless bacteria common to the mouth, change and adapt
to new conditions. They shrink in size to fit the cramped quarters and even
learn how to exist (and thrive!) on very little food. Those that need oxygen
mutate and become able to get along without it. In the process of adaptation
these formerly friendly “normal” organisms become pathogenic (capable of
producing disease) and more virulent (stronger) and they produce much more
potent toxins.
Today’s bacteriologists are confirming the discoveries of
the Price team of bacteriologists. Both isolated in root canals the same strains
of streptococcus, staphylococcus and spirochetes.
JM
Is everyone who has ever had a root canal filled made ill by it?
GM No. We believe now that every root canal filling does leak and
bacteria do invade the structure. But the variable factor is the strength of the
person’s immune system. Some healthy people are able to control the germs that
escape from their teeth into other areas of the body. We think this happens
because their immune system lymphocytes (white blood cells) and other disease
fighters aren’t constantly compromised by other ailments. In other words, they
are able to prevent those new colonies from taking hold in other tissues
throughout the body. But over time, most people with root filled teeth do seem
to develop some kinds of systemic symptoms they didn’t have before.
JM It’s really difficult to grasp that bacteria are imbedded deep
in the structure of seemingly-hard, solid looking teeth.
GM I know. Physicians and dentists have that same problem, too. You
really have to visualize the tooth structure — all of those microscopic
tubules running through the dentin. In a healthy tooth, those tubules transport
a fluid that carries nourishment to the inside. For perspective, if the tubules
of a front single-root tooth, were stretched out on the ground they’d stretch
for three miles!
A root filled tooth no longer has any fluid circulating
through it, but the maze of tubules remains. The anaerobic bacteria that live
there seem remarkably safe from antibiotics. The bacteria can migrate out into
surrounding tissue where they can “hitch hike” to other locations in the
body via the bloodstream. The new location can be any organ or gland or tissue,
and the new colony will be the next focus of infection in a body plagued by
recurrent or chronic infections.
All of the “building up” done to try to enhance the
patient’s ability to fight infections — to strengthen their immune system
— is only a holding action. Many patients won’t be well until the source of
infection — the root canal tooth — is removed.
JM I don’t doubt what you’re saying, but can you tell us more
about how Dr. Price could be sure that arthritis or other systemic conditions
and illnesses really originated in the teeth — or in a single tooth?
GM Yes. Many investigations start with the researcher just being
curious about something — and then being scientifically careful enough to
discover an answer, and then prove it’s so, many times over. Dr. Price’s
first case is very well documented. He removed an infected tooth from a woman
who suffered from severe arthritis. As soon as he finished with the patient, he
implanted the tooth beneath the skin of a healthy rabbit. Within 48 hours the
rabbit was crippled with arthritis!
Further, once the tooth was removed the patient’s
arthritis improved dramatically. This clearly suggested that the presence of the
infected tooth was a causative agent for both that patient’s and the
rabbit’s — arthritis.
[Editor’s Note — Here’s the story of that first
patient from Dr. Meinig’s book: “(Dr. Price) had a sense that, even when
(root canal therapy) appeared successful, teeth containing root fillings
remained infected. That thought kept prying on his mind, haunting him each time
a patient consulted him for relief from some severe debilitating disease for
which the medical profession could find no answer. Then one day while treating a
woman who had been confined to a wheelchair for six years from severe arthritis,
he recalled how bacterial cultures were taken from patients who were ill and
then inoculated into animals in an effort to reproduce the disease and test the
effectiveness of drugs on the disease.
With this thought in mind, although her (root filled) tooth
looked fine, he advised this arthritic patient, to have it extracted. He told
her he was going to find out what it was about this root filled tooth that was
responsible for her suffering. “All dentists know that sometimes arthritis and
other illnesses clear up if bad teeth are extracted. However, in this case, all
of her teeth appeared in satisfactory condition and the one containing this root
canal filling showed no evidence or symptoms of infection. Besides, it looked
normal on x-ray pictures.
“Immediately after Dr. Price extracted the tooth he
dismissed the patient and embedded her tooth under the skin of a rabbit. In two
days the rabbit developed the same kind of crippling arthritis as the patient
— and in ten days it died.
“ . . . The patient made a successful recovery after the
tooth’s removal! She could then walk without a cane and could even do fine
needlework again. That success led Dr. Price to advise other patients, afflicted
with a wide variety of treatment defying illnesses, to have any root filled
teeth out.”]
In the years that followed, he repeated this procedure many
hundreds of times. He later implanted only a portion of the tooth to see if that
produced the same results. It did. He then dried the tooth, ground it into
powder and injected a tiny bit into several rabbits. Same results, this time
producing the same symptoms in multiple animals.
Dr. Price eventually grew cultures of the bacteria and
injected them into the animals. Then he went a step further. He put the solution
containing the bacteria through a filter small enough to catch the bacteria. So
when he injected the resulting liquid it was free of any infecting bacteria. Did
the test animals develop the illness? Yes. The only explanation was that the
liquid had to contain toxins from the bacteria, and the toxins were also capable
of causing disease.
Dr. Price became curious about which was the more potent
infective agent, the bacteria or the toxin. He repeated that last experiment,
injecting half the animals with the toxin-containing liquid and half of them
with the bacteria from the filter. Both groups became ill, but the group
injected with the toxins got sicker and died sooner than the bacteria injected
animals.
JM
That’s amazing. Did the rabbits always develop the same disease
the patient had?
GM Mostly, yes. If the patient had heart disease the rabbit got heart
disease. If the patient had kidney disease the rabbit got kidney disease, and so
on. Only occasionally did a rabbit develop a different disease — and then the
pathology would be quite similar, in a different location.
JM If extraction proves necessary for anyone reading this, do you
want to summarize what’s special about the extraction technique?
GM Just pulling the tooth is not enough when removal proves
necessary. Dr. Price found bacteria in the tissues and bone just adjacent to the
tooth’s root. So we now recommend slow-speed drilling with a burr, to remove
one millimeter of the entire bony socket. The purpose is to remove the
periodontal ligament (which is always infected with toxins produced by
streptococcus bacteria living in the dentin tubules) and the first millimeter of
bone that lines the socket (which is usually infected).
There’s a whole protocol involved, including irrigating
with sterile saline to assure removal of the contaminated bone chips, and
treating the socket to stimulate and encourage infection-free healing. I
describe the procedure in detail, step by step, in my book [pages 185 and 186].
JM Perhaps we should back up and talk about oral health — to
PREVENT needing an extraction. Caries or inflamed gums seem much more common
than root canals. Do they pose any threat?
GM
Yes, they absolutely do. But let me point out that we can’t talk about oral
health apart from total health. The problem is that patients and dentists alike
haven’t come around to seeing that dental caries reflect systemic — meaning
“whole body” — illness. Dentists have learned to restore teeth so expertly
that both they and their patients have come to regard tooth decay as a trivial
matter. It isn’t.
Small cavities too often become big cavities. Big cavities
too often lead to further destruction and the eventual need for root canal
treatment.
JM Then talk to us about prevention.
GM
The only scientific way to prevent tooth decay is through diet and
nutrition. Dr. Ralph Steinman did some outstanding, landmark research at Loma
Linda University. He injected a glucose solution into mice — into their
bodies, so the glucose didn’t even touch their teeth. Then he observed the
teeth for any changes. What he found was truly astonishing. The glucose reversed
the normal flow of fluid in the dentin tubules, resulting in all of the test
animals developing severe tooth decay! Dr. Steinman demonstrated dramatically
what I said a minute ago: Dental caries reflect systemic illness.
Let’s take a closer look to see how this might happen.
Once a tooth gets infected and the cavity gets into the nerve and blood vessels,
bacteria find their way into those tiny tubules of the dentin. Then no matter
what we do by way of treatment, we’re never going to completely eradicate the
bacteria hiding in the miles of tubules. In time the bacteria can migrate
through lateral canals into the surrounding bony socket that supports the tooth.
Now the host not only has a cavity in a tooth, plus an underlying infection of
supporting tissue to deal with, but the bacteria also exude potent systemic
toxins. These toxins circulate throughout the body triggering activity by the
immune system — and probably causing the host to feel less well. This host
response can vary from just dragging around and feeling less energetic, to overt
illness — of almost any kind. Certainly, such a person will be more vulnerable
to whatever “bugs” are going around, because his/her body is already under
constant challenge and the immune system continues to be “turned on” by
either the infective agent or its toxins — or both.
JM
What a fascinating concept. Can you tell us more about the
protective nutrition you mentioned?
GM Yes. Dr. Price traveled all over the world doing his research on
primitive peoples who still lived in their native ways. He found fourteen
cultural pockets scattered all over the globe where the natives had no access to
“civilization” — and ate no refined foods.
Dr. Price studied their diets carefully. He found they
varied greatly, but the one thing they had in common was that they ate whole,
unrefined foods. With absolutely no access to tooth brushes, floss, fluoridated
water or toothpaste, the primitive peoples studied were almost 100% free of
tooth decay. Further — and not unrelated — they were also almost 100% free
of all the degenerative diseases we suffer — problems with the heart, lungs,
kidneys, liver, joints, skin (allergies), and the whole gamut of illnesses that
plague Mankind. No one food proved to be magic as a preventive food. I believe
we can thrive best by eating a wide variety of whole foods.
JM Amazing. So by “diet and nutrition” for oral (and total)
health you meant eating a pretty basic diet of whole foods?
GM
Exactly. And no sugar or white flour. These are (and always have
been) the first culprits. Tragically, when the primitives were introduced to
sugar and white flour their superior level of health deteriorated rapidly. This
has been demonstrated time and again. During the last sixty or more years we
have added in increasing amounts, highly refined and fabricated cereals and
boxed mixes of all kinds, soft drinks, refined vegetable oils and a whole host
of other foodless “foods.” It is also during those same years that we as a
nation have installed more and more root canal fillings — and degenerative
diseases have become rampant. I believe — and Dr. Price certainly proved to my
satisfaction — that these simultaneous factors are NOT coincidences.
JM I certainly understand what you are saying. But I’m still a
little shocked to talk with a dentist who doesn’t stress oral hygiene.
GM Well, I’m not against oral hygiene. Of course, hygiene practices
are preventive, and help minimize the destructive effect of our “civilized,”
refined diet. But the real issue is still diet. The natives Dr. Price tracked
down and studied weren’t free of cavities, inflamed gums, and degenerative
diseases because they had better tooth brushes!
It’s so easy to lose sight of the significance of what Dr.
Price discovered. We tend to sweep it under the rug — we’d actually prefer
to hear that if we would just brush better, longer, or more often, we too could
be free of dental problems.
Certainly, part of the purpose of my book is to stimulate
dental research into finding a way to sterilize dentin tubules. Only then can
dentists really learn to save teeth for a lifetime. But the bottom line remains:
A primitive diet of whole-unrefined foods is the only thing that has been found
to actually prevent both tooth decay and degenerative diseases.
To order “Root Canal Cover-Up EXPOSED — Many Illnesses
Result”, by Dr. Meinig, send your check or money order (U.S. funds) for $19.95
+ $2.00 shipping ($2.50 to Canada, $3.00 to other countries), California
residents add $1.45 for state sales tax. Send to Bion Publishing, 323 E.
Matilija 110-151, Ojai, CA 93023.