Episode 25: Dental Dangers
Transcript:
Episode 25: Dental Dangers
Warren:
Health hunters, health hunters, I don’t know if you can hear me. Dan, you might want to take over the intros and extros, because I am live from Toronto. I’m on business out here, and I’m sitting in a cab. Dr. Pompa may be in a chair today, but you know, he’s been truly manning over the last probably six months to a year, Dr. Pompa. You’ve been dealing with some serious dental challenges, and again, it’s one of those causational issues that we look into as a health hunter and find the dental dangers that can leave you sick and permanently distraught in life, and you’d never know that it was that root canal, it was that mercury amalgam filling, that it’s this cavitation that’s poisoning your body on a daily basis. Let’s open up and unwrap this topic of dental dangers today, Dr. Pompa, and maybe you should take over the intro/extro, because I’m a little bit in a cab right now.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and I can hear the music probably better than you. This one I want to focus on, cavitation as a dental danger. Of course, we’ve had shows where we’ve discussed amalgam fillings, which are silver fillings in your mouth, the dark fillings, if you will, that contain 50 percent mercury. Every country’s banning these things and already has bans except here in the United States, except if you’re pregnant or nursing. Then, of course, they recommend you don’t get these fillings done or take them out at that time, but bottom line is cavitations—let me define that first. It’s basically an infection in your jaw. Typically occurs because of a pulled or extracted tooth, so therefore a wisdom tooth. I just read estimates this morning. Eighty-eight percent of pulled wisdom teeth end in a cavitation. This was in a study. Those are pretty high numbers, and you move forward in the mouth, chances get a little less. If you have a tooth pulled, one of your more front teeth, if you will, it was about a 44 percent chance, so you can see that the further back, the bigger the tooth, the greater the risk of cavitation, and we’re talking 90 percent risk, so therefore, those listening, if you’ve had wisdom teeth extracted, then chances are, you have a cavitation.
Now, you may be saying to yourself, I don’t feel anything. I feel fine. I have no pain in my mouth, so how could I have infection? That’s the nature of this beast.
Warren:
Neither did I.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly. Neither did I, and I had major cavitation, so let me just explain what happens and why this occurs first. What happens when you extract the tooth, especially the way they did this prior, and still doing this, they use the novocaine, and it has a constricting effect on the vessels. Now, you can choose to use numbing agents, novocaine, that don’t have the constricting effect. When you constrict the vessels, now you’re cutting off the blood flow, and therefore now you don’t get enough blood flow, and that can lead to cavitation. Also, when they go in, they don’t remove all of the bacteria, all of these bacteria that hide in these tubules, so they don’t clear enough bone, and even some of the ligament that holds the tooth in place actually gets left behind. If any is left behind, it always forms a cavitation, an infection.
Now, there’s such little blood flow there that your body doesn’t recognize it. It can’t send blood there, white blood cells to kill it, so therefore you don’t get a red, painful area that your immune system would normally cause. These anaerobes, as they’re called, these are bacteria that survive without oxygen called anaerobic bacteria. Very deadly, by the way. They live there and feast on your jaw and create these holes in your jaw that go on without you knowing it. Here’s the problem. These bacteria have the ability to get into your bloodstream and affect your immune system in a low-grade way.
I spent a lot of time reading more about this, and I can’t tell you how many people get these cavitations removed, and their spine literally feels like it unwinds, meaning that all the pains and aches that they had that they never would’ve thought that it could’ve been associated with anything going on in their mouth, literally immediately or within days starts to change, and they become pain-free, as an example. Maybe it’s headache-free. Maybe it’s an autoimmune condition that all of a sudden immediately reverses itself. All of this, because these bacteria were low-grade challenging the immune system and causing these inflammatory problems, so therefore you can have problems in your feet, in your knees, in your hips, in your spine, wherever it is, in your gut—I can go down the list—and you can think that it has nothing to do with your mouth, but it may, and that’s what this show’s about, so the pain, the lack of energy, the headaches, the gut problems, whatever problem you’re having, it could be coming from a hidden cavitation. I think everyone listening—I think we have their attention.
Warren:
Yeah, this is a causational strategy that, as a health hunter, we need to know, because we can spend a lot of time, money, effort, and energy going from doctor to doctor, medical professional to alternative practitioner, and find out that no one went upstream and found that your 12-year-old molars, the two or four, the impacted one, whatever it was—it was the billing code, for sure, and they put you under, do all this, and it was the very reason you got sick. You look back on their life, and when did those symptoms start? When did that autoimmune condition start? When did I start being not able to pay attention in class or whatever it may be? It could be linked to these hidden infections, deep within our mouth, and cavitations are one of the number one causes. I had them. Obviously, you had them. Your story and mine, we’ll share those here on today’s show.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s amazing, these bacteria and how clever they are. I’ll start into my story, Warren, and then you can go into yours, and I think the stories are important, because there’s lessons in these stories. In this show, I’m going to make sure that—there’s only certain dentists you want to go to to deal with this, by the way, because it has to be dealt with correctly, and that’s really, really important.
What happened with me was I went in for some standard dental work, if you will, and in the cleaning, they had found some deep pockets and one which was around this wisdom tooth that was partly impacted, should have been out probably years ago, but it collected some bacteria. He went in to clean it, and the laser—he was using a laser, which is a really good idea, by the way—it fell through, and there was a cavitation under the wisdom tooth, so he extracted the tooth correctly and decavitated it, cleared out all the infection, and I’ll tell you the process that he uses. He puts these little grafts in there so you don’t get a cavitation, and he followed that whole procedure, which I’ll explain in the show.
What happened was, a day or two later, I didn’t have pain in the extraction site. I had pain in the upper left quadrant. That surgery was done in the lower right, and I had excruciating pain, and I knew what happened. Those bacteria relocated from there to a cavitation where I had a wisdom tooth out 25 years ago, and—
Warren:
Isn’t that odd? Back up there, Dan, just to make it clear what happened. You’re saying that you had another toxic site that had a cavitation as you were getting your dental work done. You had no pain at that site, but in another location, unrelated to that site, you started having pain.
Dr. Pompa:
I did, and I’m going to talk—the music’s playing, and when we get back, I’ll finish this story, but that’s exactly what happened, so stay tuned for the rest of the story.
Warren:
Can’t wait.
Dr. Pompa:
All right, so the rest of the story.
Warren:
We’re back for the rest of the story.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, Warren, you had it right, so I literally had one cavitation under a wisdom tooth taken out. The bacteria literally ran from there, which is very common, by the way, and relocated in another cavitation in the upper left in my mouth where I had a wisdom tooth taken out 25 years before. I had no pain up there. I had no problem up there that I thought. However, when these bacteria relocated, now, all of a sudden, I had excruciating pain and swelling. Warren, you remember that. We actually did a Facebook Live, and you could see that my face was swollen, but it was the opposite side that I had the surgery done on, so I knew that I had a new problem.
Warren:
Did we do the Viome test at that point? Was it the same bacteria, or was it the bacteria that showed up in your gut at that time, too, just to—
Dr. Pompa:
It was after that. Yeah, it was actually after I cleared this one out that these bacteria showed up on a Viome test in the stool, meaning that it was in my gut now.
Warren:
Then, when you did the analysis on your—when she went over it, she was like, did you have any dental work done?
Dr. Pompa:
Exactly.
Warren:
These identified dental bacteria, so how cool is that, that she saw these unique bacteria that showed up in your gut during the dental work?
Dr. Pompa:
I had four bacteria associated with oral bacteria, three of which are really only found in that oral cavity typically, and I’m sure there were others that I introduced into my microbiome, my gut, and if I didn’t have a good gut, I would’ve been very challenged. After that, I did have some GI things, a little more sensitivity, I would say, than I normally had, but if someone already had a challenged gut, they’d have been wrecked.
These guys get up in there, and it was a few—I don’t know. The inflammation went down, and it was days later that, all of a sudden, I get this excruciating headache, so much so that I tell my wife, if this gets work, you may have to take me to the hospital. That’s how bad it was. Warren, you know I don’t take pain medication. That night, I took double the dose of Tylenol or whatever I had. I can’t remember what it was, but it did nothing. I was trying everything, and I literally could not relieve the pain, so finally, literally icing my whole head, the pain went down, and it took 24 hours to completely go away. That’s when I knew I had a big problem.
Then, I went back to the dentist, because I said, okay, these infections were trying to cross my blood-brain barrier, and my body raised serious hell to stop it. It saved my life, my immune system, and that’s what the pain was, so in hindsight, I probably shouldn’t even have taken the Advil or whatever it was, because I was fighting against my body actually saving my life, but thank God, my body kept the fight on. It didn’t listen to the pain meds, but it did that because it was saving my life, driving this inflammatory response.
Anyway, bottom line is, they went up in that area and fell into a major pocket of infection, so he clears that, and some things got better. However, after that, I get this neck stiffness and pain and a different low back pain in my sacrum, so the top of my skull and my sacrum, that is not going away. I did Prolozone in my neck four times. I did everything that—I went to two chiropractors, everything I know, and I still had this stiffness that was—and it was every day. It wasn’t pain. It was when I couldn’t look left and couldn’t look right. I would get pain. Very, very odd.
Doing some further research, I realized the dura of your spine, which connects—it’s a coating that surrounds your brain and spinal cord, but it connects in the first three vertical—I’m sorry—vertebral segments, your vertebra, so C1, C2, C3, and your sacrum, exactly where I had stiffness, and these cavitations can get into that dura, the bacteria, and create problems. Bottom line is that I went back to Jerry recently. This is my dentist. He’s actually in New York. He looked under the tooth that was in front of where this other cavitation was. We did a 3D x-ray. Write this down, because this is the only way to see these cavitations really good, because we didn’t see it on plain films. Did not show up on a plain x-ray.
We did the 3D x-ray, and sure enough, there it was, under the tooth, massive hole, massive cavitation, so therefore he went in, pulled that tooth, and found three cysts, meaning walled-off bacteria. Literally, three of these things the size of small marbles he pulled out of infection, one millimeter from breaking into my sinus cavity, so anyway, got those out and then redid it.
Now, I want to talk about—and here’s the funny thing. What happens now is immediately the pressure starts releasing, so you can have an immediate effect in the dental chair and from days to a week later. Literally, the spine starts unwinding, pressure starts coming off, immune system relaxes, once you get rid of the source. I think it’s important now to talk about how you choose a dentist and some of these procedures that you need to do, because not every dentist understands these cavitations. Again, we’re talking to people who’ve had any teeth extracted. You need to get these looked at, and the best way is a 3D x-ray, a 3D scan where they literally just take an x-ray of your entire jaw, and it’s 3D, so it’s not just a plain film. That’s the best way to see it, because we’ll get that question.
Warren:
Actually, I did a regular x-ray, because I didn’t have the 3D available, and I’ve had two wisdom teeth removed, so what I decided to do is I had them look at it, and you could just see that, in those sites, the bone just was not a chance. What that—
Dr. Pompa:
You there? We may have lost Warren.
Warren:
Wait a minute. I’m back. Yeah.
Dr. Pompa:
You took the regular film. They looked, and you could see that the bone wasn’t there.
Warren:
Yeah, it was way less dense. You could see that it wasn’t there, and it was Dr. [17:18], actually, a good friend of ours, and he said, look, Warren, there are only a handful of these things. It looks to me that it is only a handful of these things at wisdom teeth, which goes with the statistics. Eighty percent are not cavitations, so I go through this procedure without the 3D x-ray, because I’m like, look—he did send me for the 3D x-ray. I just couldn’t get in. It was busy at the time. Now, I’d recommend getting the 3D x-ray, because it is a—they put you under, and you’re pretty loopy, to say the least, but it’s not a bad procedure, I would say. Still, any procedure, any surgery is not fun, but he drilled into my tooth, and he said that it was just like a thin eggshell. He just popped right in, and he said there were very nice, soft cavitations, and he had to drill them out. You know the procedures better than I do.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, well, hey, Warren, you’re going to have to finish your story at the top of the next segment here, so we’ll be right back on Health Hunters Radio.
Warren:
Awesome. We’re back.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, we’re back, and Warren, yeah, so you were telling your story. You just went in, because like you said, almost 90 percent of them are infected, so he went in, and what did he find?
Warren:
He found a beautiful—he said it was like an eggshell. You can think about it that way. There’s a little egg, and inside the egg is not dense bone, so the shell is dense, and so if you drill, on each drilling, he pops through into this essentially dead space, which is just not even bone. It’s just now the infected tissue of bone that never grew back properly, because of course the dentine ligament wasn’t taken out properly. It’s like one of those surgeries is that everyone got their wisdom teeth out, because it’s going to destroy your mouth, which makes no sense. It’s like taking out tonsils and appendix and doing C-sections. It’s just a lot of the time, I’d say most of the time, it’s not necessary, but it becomes medically necessary because of the billing code and the risk and all the other things we won’t get into.
I had, obviously, at 12 years old, had these out. I probably should’ve kept them in. They weren’t impacted. There was no reason to take them out, so long story short, here I am at 41 years old or 42 years old, having these things removed. They popped through like an eggshell, really nice-sized cavitations, and there’s some things that we do and he teaches us to do that we teach our clients to do. I made sure that I got on Cytodetox and also [20:12], the binding product, the activated carbon that we recommend called Bind, and we took that beforehand so that any of the toxins, like he said, that get relief in your GI tract have a chance of getting bound up. In supporting that, I also started on some antivirals and antimicrobials, because in the inside of the pockets are these anaerobic bacteria and viruses that your body do not like and even parasites, so I started getting on those protocols beforehand. Then, post, he drilled me all out. He did the ozone treatment. That’s what he did, Dr. Pompa. He doesn’t have all the fancy gadgets like Dr. Jerry does. I actually went to a dental surgeon, very precise, and he did the ozone treatment and sewed me up.
The thing is, like you said at the top of the show, you take Bind for its activated carbon that you made right afterwards as well, so before and after, and I continued my antiviral/antimicrobial. The system that you put me on was VIVI and Number 3 Bactrex systemic formula. Revelationhealth.com has those and the Bind and the Cytodetox, but all that being said, I still need to go back, Dr. Pompa, because there’s no perfect cavitation surgery, either, so I can have this surgery, and there’s now a 15 percent chance or so that it still didn’t keel over as it should and created new bone yet, so I need to go back in again.
Now, did I feel better? I would say I have. I would say my health has improved but not to the degree where—I wasn’t in a situation where I had a bunch of chronic pain. I wasn’t at that place anymore, and so as a health hunter, the causational strategy is always the best solution. That’s what you’ve got to start throwing supplements at, anti-inflammatories, and things like that. In my body, I always look at these upstream causes, and with a 90 percent cavitation rate, I definitely wanted to go in and extract it. That immune system could later get shot up with cancer, you name it, so—
Dr. Pompa:
It does.
Warren:
I still need to go back in, so that’s my story, and I was very, very successful, but yet I still need to get that verification done by 3D x-ray, I believe, this time for sure.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and the 3D x-ray helps, because you can be very specific. We wouldn’t have gone under that tooth, because remember, he cleared out my cavitation behind the tooth. It looked like it was gone, but I would have some weird things happen with that tooth that I knew that those bacteria ran further under that tooth, but you couldn’t—we looked at the film. They took a plain film when I first came in the office. I looked at it, couldn’t see it, and then I went and got the 3D x-ray, and then, sure enough, there it was, and it was so dramatic on the 3D x-ray. I’m going to do a Cell TV, and I’m going to show these 3D x-rays so people can actually see it.
Warren:
Can you see the cysts?
Dr. Pompa:
No, you just see the massive bone loss. That’s all you see, because it doesn’t—it goes right through the cyst, but you just see there’s no bone. It looked like my tooth was floating, which it really kind of was, because he bound—he connected the tooth to the one in front, because he took out so much bone when he took out the cavitation, it was too loose, right? When the bacteria relocated, it ate even more bone out, so the cavitation got that much worse in the matter of five months, to the point where it started affecting my neck and my spine, my dura that surrounds my spine. It was going systemic. That’s how bad it was, so anyway—
Warren:
We could’ve lost you, Dr. Pompa, and I don’t say that—I usually don’t say that, but it’s true.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, it’s true. I started getting—even when I was flying—this is how bad it got. Every time I would take an airplane, I would get a headache, and it would come from my neck, and I could even feel my teeth just weren’t normal on that side. It was just—I can’t even describe it, other than I knew that there was more infection, and there ended up being more infection. Let me give you some hints. You have to find a dentist that knows about this stuff. You can’t just go to a regular dentist. You have to find a biological dentist. There is a website, iaomt.org, and we’ll put that in the show notes—that you can find biological dentists. However, listen to some of the things that I’m going to give you, some of the tips to look for, because not every dentist is going to do the same procedure.
Now, if you have health challenges, then I recommend that you do everything to the teeth that I’m going to recommend. This can be done without a laser, but I recommend the laser, because the laser creates even ozone, and that’s able to penetrate some of these tubules where these infections hide. Then, when you remove all the infection, to the dentist’s eye, it looks good, but then it heals over, but these little guys are in these tubules, and they’re hiding. When you do it with ozone, at least use ozone, so a dentist that uses ozone, that’s tip number one. A laser with ozone that creates ozone is a step further, because then we’re able to get rid of these bacteria in the bone, so ozone is now a must. It’s a gas, and therefore it can penetrate in there deeper. They get in there, they scrape out the infection, and then they ozonate, and then they kind of scrape a little more, and then they ozonate again, or they laser and ozonate. Jerry, our dentist, has a laser that creates the ozone.
What happens is, then he puts something in called PRF, platelet-rich fibrin, and this creates—it’s loaded with white blood cells, so he puts a little bit of this scaffolding in there, if you will. It’s kind of like a bone graft, but it’s not bone graft, but it just gives your body a chance to build bone around the scaffolding. The PRF, this platelet-rich fibrin stimulates the healing, and it stimulates the bone growth, so now you can start forming good bone in the hole that could typically seal over and create a new cavitation, so the platelet-rich fibrin is a new technology. Now, you could successfully decavitate without the PRF, but evidently, it takes down the chances of a reinfection greatly, so the ozone is key, for sure. I would absolutely make sure you do the ozone, no matter what. The PRF takes it another step further, the platelet-rich fibrin.
Then, of course, they seal it up, and it’s very important that you stay low for a few days, not exercise, because you don’t want to lose the clot, so I had to stay in New York for a few days, because I couldn’t fly, which can trigger the clot. Those are some of the main things. Now, what I’ve learned is—well, I’m going to tell you what I learned. The music’s playing. This is a big one, and I’m going to tell you what I learned postop, and I think this is going to be a huge part of cavitation surgery, so stay tuned, and we’re going to give it to you.
Warren:
I can’t wait.
Dr. Pompa:
All right. Well, this is a—
Warren:
Common thing, right?
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly, so this is key.
Warren:
I don’t know this. Do I know this?
Dr. Pompa:
No. Using, injecting, getting ozone injections post one week after you get the surgery, it reduces reinfection massively, and you have somewhere between six and eight weeks where the bone’s not formed over, where you can just inject right into the surgical site and inject ozone. It’s easy. It’s really painless. You feel pressure is what you’d feel, not like a burning sensation necessarily, and what that does is it eliminates any infection, any of these bacteria that would have survived everything that I just said up to that.
Also, I would recommend a vitamin C IV as close to that time as you can, that day. Mine, unfortunately, was a couple of days later, a few days later, because I wasn’t able to do it where my dentist was, so vitamin C. I would even take some vitamin D. If you can’t take a vitamin C IV, just—we call it vitamin C flush, when you get home, where you take basically a heaping teaspoon of a simple ascorbic acid. You can buy it anywhere. Until you get diarrhea, basically, is what we call a vitamin C flush, and basically you can stay on a little bit of that. About half of the dose that caused diarrhea, for a few days, would be recommended. Then, like I said, some of the vitamin D, some minerals, things like that to help mineralize, to help the remineralization of the bone.
Postop, I think that, because ozone is so easy to get now, I think that it can take these cavitation surgeries to the next level, getting injections, and even just a few injections after the surgery, one a week for a few weeks, really is changing the statistics on these things, so that’s a secret. You could potentially have a successful cavitation without it, but the chance of reinfection on these things even a year later is so great, to me, if you’re going to do it, do it right. The vitamin C IV, the postop injections, at least a week later. Give it a week, I would say, to settle down, and then do the ozone injections. Those are some of the things that I’ve learned about this process, and this is—you just got the best out there right there, because even your dentist, who may be a biological dentist, probably doesn’t know these things. This is the latest, and this is—
Warren:
[31:01] is the best of the best, and it’s [31:02] spoke at this, because I know Dr. Derek is going to yearly seminars at IAOMT, and a year ago, he was not using this technology. I know that. He did one on Meredith that we did a show on on your website, and he didn’t offer that to her, either, so this is great, some great information. I wish I would’ve known, because now he wants to go back in under the knife. I know I [31:31], but I have to go back and get the x-ray. I know that I will go back, but if we can eliminate a second surgery by 90 percent, that’s good math right there.
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah. Absolutely. I think, look, this can be a game-changer for people. One of the things that—I see people from all over, virtually, and help them through health problems, coach them through health problems, and most of it’s unexplainable, and I can tell you that most of the time people that have things that haven’t cleared up—they’ve changed their diet, they’ve done a lot of great things—there’s a hidden stressor, and that’s why they’re not getting well. That’s why their health—they did all these great things, and they got somewhat better. This got better. This got better. However, I’m still fatigued. My sleep’s not right. My hormones still—there’s still a stressor, and Warren, you hear me tell the doctors that we train that all the time. If they’re not getting well, there’s still an upstream stressor. I can tell you these cavitations are oftentimes the stressor that, when we take it away, we see miracles happen.
I had a woman who had 21 years of migraine headaches, and it was actually a little more than that. I think she was—26. This woman was in her late 70s. She ends up coming to me, and I start asking her questions, this and that, and I realized it was definitely coming from her mouth. I wasn’t sure if she had cavitations at this point, but what happened was, she ended up going to a biological dentist, a really good one in Mexico, because it was cheap. She had 50, 60 thousand dollars’ worth of dental stuff she needed done, and she got it for a fraction of that, so it was worth the travel, but they cleared out these cavitations, and her 26 or whatever it was years of migraine headaches went away within a week. When you see things like that happen, you realize that, man, this is a serious, hidden issue that so many people have, and stories. Just like you said, people in the chair, as the cavitations come out, and their pain literally unraveling right before their very eyes. Oftentimes, one of the signs that you didn’t get all the infection is that your symptoms are still there, so that’s why you want to do it right.
There’s another little trick that they do. They’ll go into a site, and you can inject it first with ozone, and the ozone will give a temporary relief or flare-up of a symptom, and that’ll tell you that there’s a cavitation in there, so oftentimes, that’s what they do. If you have a 3D x-ray, they can go into that spot that they see on the x-ray and inject it with ozone, and then, again, some people have relief for months, but what they find is oftentimes it does come back, and surgery needs to be done. However, there are those times where just the injection seems to keep it at bay.
The problem is you don’t open it up and let it reheal, so now you have a hole there that is just—it’s an open window for other toxins and bacteria to [35:02], and you have to keep in mind, when they analyze—and they can do DNA testing. They call it dental DNA. It’s where they actually take these bacteria, man, and they analyze them, and they find Lyme spirochetes. People say, gosh, I didn’t even know I had Lyme. Yeah, well, many people have been exposed to Lyme, but it just harbors in the body where it’s safe from your immune system. These anaerobic bacteria, heavy metals, different viruses, funguses, nasty, nasty pathogens live in these things, and I’ll tell you, you may be doing okay, but the moment you have other stressors in your life, physical, chemical, or emotional, now all of a sudden these guys start going systemic. They start moving. They start taking over, because your immune system’s weaker. Then, they’re able to move. They’re able to cause mischief. They’re able to get in your sinus cavities, and that’s what was happening to me. You would have to understand how serious this is and how serious it is to do this correctly.
Warren:
Yeah, it’s a total game-changer, and I think for my wife and some other friends who have chronic issues, I never even asked her if she had her wisdom teeth out, which I can’t remember in my current conversation, because she has chronic headaches and neck pain more often than she would like. Again, we have young kids, so I’m not saying that’s it, but it’s really got me thinking, man, chronic headaches and challenges like that. I wonder if that’s it, and that could be you listening right now. Man, I’ve got [36:33] and headaches, I’m sick all the time, I have chronic pain in my low back, plus—we have a chiropractic following. We’ve been training and coaching chiropractors as one of the main—and for medical doctors as well, but they’re doing all this neck adjustment, trying to—some do pain. Some are just doing it for function, but you have to go upstream. It could be something in the client’s mouth, so that’s really good.
If you’re listening to this, and you’re part of the chiropractic community, and you’re a chiropractic lover like we are, let your chiropractor know and show him this research. He could really help a lot more of the folks that are in his office, and he can collaborate with a biological dentist and help a lot more people as we find these health hunter discoveries and share them with those that can make a difference in this world. This is a really great show and timing, Dr. Pompa, as you just got of the plane a couple of days ago, correct?
Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly, that’s why I was so excited to just bring this topic in every way I can, because I know it’s a life-changer, and I’ve seen it in other people, and then I lived it. That’s my life, it seems like, all the time.
Warren:
Live it to lead it. That’s the—
Dr. Pompa:
Live it to lead it. That’s what our seminars are called, right? Hey, and I want to throw this out there, too. Remember, root canals, folks. There’s no safe root canals. All of those bacteria are still there. They take out the root, but the bacteria run into these microtubules that I was talking about, and there they are, and then they seal it, so pay attention. I hear the music already. It was a fast show, but any root canals in people that have challenges, we’ve got to get these things out. We have to do it safely with the procedures and the protocols that we talked about on this show. Share this show with your friends. Tell them about Health Hunters, because this is life-changing stuff. It’s going to change yours. Share it with others.