Guest guest Posted January 5, 2005 Report Share Posted January 5, 2005 I wanted to see if any of you wise people had an opinion on this issue. I went to my dentist today and found I had a lot of gumlime decay that happened in the last 8 mos. I had quite a bit back then too. My dentist told me that I had some kind of acid problem. He said I was probably eating too many acid foods or that my foods were not digesting properly and making my system acid. I didn't take very well to the anesthesia and he said this was also a sign of being too acid. He recommended getting some Ph strips and testing my mouth and urine first thing in the morning. I read about this acid food/ basic food idea in a few nutrition books. I think one of the paleo nutrition books I have talks about it and I think Perricone's book is big into eating more foods that are basic. I eat mostly NT... lots of meats and raw dairy products... some cultured vegetables and stocks. I am allergic to wheat and don't tollerate other grains either so I don't eat them. Does what you eat affect the Ph of your body or are there other factors at work? Thanks so much, Kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2005 Report Share Posted January 5, 2005 Kim, I am interested in this subject too. My dentist told me I had acid reflux eating away my enamel (but my gums were fine). I had heartburn often. For the past year or so, I've been loading up on calcium and it seems to have helped. No more reflux or heartburn ( " reflux " is when it actually comes all the way back up to your mouth; " heartburn " is just how it sounds.) I take a heaping spoonful of calcium powder with food at each meal. I would not doubt that it's 10 grams a day. The kind I take is tricalciumphosphate (TCP). I bought a 40-lb bag; it's cheap. All also chew a calcium-formula pill or two a day, to get the magnesium and D. My joints are better too. -Mark _____ From: Lenz Kim, Charlie and Riley [mailto:lenz3@...] Sent: Wednesday, January 05, 2005 7:56 PM Subject: Acid/Basic foods * I wanted to see if any of you wise people had an opinion on this issue. I went to my dentist today and found I had a lot of gumlime decay that happened in the last 8 mos. I had quite a bit back then too. My dentist told me that I had some kind of acid problem. He said I was probably eating too many acid foods or that my foods were not digesting properly and making my system acid. I didn't take very well to the anesthesia and he said this was also a sign of being too acid. He recommended getting some Ph strips and testing my mouth and urine first thing in the morning. I read about this acid food/ basic food idea in a few nutrition books. I think one of the paleo nutrition books I have talks about it and I think Perricone's book is big into eating more foods that are basic. I eat mostly NT... lots of meats and raw dairy products... some cultured vegetables and stocks. I am allergic to wheat and don't tollerate other grains either so I don't eat them. Does what you eat affect the Ph of your body or are there other factors at work? Thanks so much, Kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2005 Report Share Posted January 5, 2005 Kim- >I read about this acid food/ basic food idea in a few nutrition books. I >think one of the paleo nutrition books I have talks about it and I think >Perricone's book is big into eating more foods that are basic. As far as I know, this whole " acid/base " thing is a huge, steaming crock of manure -- and not the good kind of manure that helps build soil fertility either. Polluted manure that has to be stored in toxic waste drums under Yucca mountain for tens of thousands of years until technology advances enough that it can safely and affordably purify the manure of harmful nonsense. Here's what Price had to say on the subject: >>In no instance have I found the change from a high immunity to dental >>caries to a high susceptibility among these primitive racial stocks to be >>associated with a change from a diet with a high potential alkalinity to >>a high potential acidity, as would seem to have been the case had the >>high alkalinity balance theory been the correct explanation. If the >>requisite is so simple as a potential alkalinity, why has not the >>addition of sodium bicarbonate to a deficient diet controlled dental caries? That's from http://www.price-pottenger.org/Articles/Acid_base_bal.html >I eat mostly NT... lots of meats and raw dairy products... some cultured >vegetables and stocks. I am allergic to wheat and don't tollerate other >grains either so I don't eat them. I seem to recall you mentioning eating sugar, albeit NT varieties. Am I misremembering? If not, you might consider eliminating all sugar from your diet. Reducing or eliminating starch, at least temporarily, might be useful too, if part of your problem is compromised absorption. Also, it could be that dairy and you just don't mix. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2005 Report Share Posted January 5, 2005 Kim, I do think an alkaline environment in your mouth is crucial to dental health. For years, when I was at my sickest, my mouth was extremely acid (the pH strip actually didn't change its yellow color at all) and I had numerous dental problems--not just cavities, but some tooth tops worn down to the yellow dentin, one tooth turning a dark color, red, swollen and receeding gums, and teeth turning yellow near the gums. It was only after months of an alternate cancer therapy that included huge amounts of vegetable juices every day (mostly carrot then) that testing strips showed not just the green color that indicates normal, but the deep blue that healthy children have, and it was then that my dental problems began to disappear. My diet now still calls for about 32 ounces of vegetable juice a day (I eat no vegetables and only a tiny portion of fruit) and I have no other sources of calcium (for the last six months I was drinking milk, but no more than 4 or so oz. per day) except terramin clay (calcium montmorillonite). I am 66 years old and my teeth are actually remineralizing! Bright white enamal is speading across the tops that showed dentin and also the tooth that was discolored. The yellow coloring at the base of my teeth has disappeared and my gums are now a healthy pink instead of a raw red, the receding has stopped and the swelling is gone. I'm hoping the receding will eventually be reversed. I don't think I have any cavities, but I actually haven't been to the dentist for years now. (I used to have to go every 3 mos, apart from specialized work, just to have my teeth cleaned.) If you decide to do the testing, it should be done in the morning, before you eat anything. Spit out three times and let fresh saliva come in for the test. Good luck. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 Mark- >I am interested in this subject too. My dentist told me I had acid reflux >eating away my enamel (but my gums were fine). I had heartburn often. I'd just like to point out that the alleged issue of balancing the acid ash versus alkaline ash loads of foods in the diet (or weighting them in the alkaline direction) has *absolutely nothing* to do with stomach acid and acid reflux. " Acid vs alkaline " issues involve the metabolic products of food combustion. Acid reflux involves, well, stomach acid. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 > Bright white enamal is > speading across the tops that showed dentin and also the tooth that was > discolored. - Isn't it amazing what good nutrition can do! Do you make your own juice? 32 oz a day! What types of vegetables do you juice? And also, how much clay do you take? I was under the impression that you couldn't take the clay long term because it would prevent you from absorbing minerals in you food. You don't seem to have a problem with that. Thanks so much. Kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 > As far as I know, this whole " acid/base " thing is a huge, steaming crock of > manure -- , I have tended to agree with this. I have read that even really acidy foods can turn alkaline in the body and vice versa. > I seem to recall you mentioning eating sugar, albeit NT varieties. Am I > misremembering? If not, you might consider eliminating all sugar from your > diet. Reducing or eliminating starch, at least temporarily, might be > useful too, if part of your problem is compromised absorption. Also, it > could be that dairy and you just don't mix. > Actually, I gave up sugar altogether (except a little berries) over a month ago and though it was hard for the first week it's become much easier. I was eating a huge chocolate bar every day... YIKES! That'll take a little time to reverse. I'm going to do the Ph testing and hope that maybe cutting out sugar (and starch - I'm low carbing - lost 12 lbs) will have solved the problem. I really hope it's not milk... cheese is my new chocolate! Thanks for the input. Kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 All also chew a calcium-formula pill or two > a day, to get the magnesium and D. My joints are better too. > Mark, I guess I don't understand why calcium would help with the acid problem? I this like taking TUMS? Just curious. Thanks for replying. Kim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 Kim- >Actually, I gave up sugar altogether (except a little berries) over a month >ago and though it was hard for the first week it's become much easier. I >was eating a huge chocolate bar every day... YIKES! That'll take a little >time to reverse. Yeah, I'd guess that played a large role in your tooth decay problem. Sugar seems to nail us both directly (via whatever mechanism that causes the flow of fluids into the microtubules of the teeth to reverse) and indirectly, by feeding weeds in the gut and impairing absorption. For people with existing problems, I strongly suspect that even in the absence of a weight problem, NT-style sugars and starches are better off eliminated. >I really hope it's not milk... cheese is my new chocolate! Well, if you stick to aged cheeses it might not be an issue, and you could also experiment with going cold-turkey for a week or so and then trying other cheeses -- goat cheese, sheep cheese, Guernsey cheese, that sort of thing. I don't know. So often we're fumbling around in the dark, even though for us it's high noon compared to what it is for most people. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2005 Report Share Posted January 6, 2005 Kim, <Isn't it amazing what good nutrition can do! Do you make your own juice? 32 oz a day! That's actually the minimum. It's somewhat more than that most days. While I was fighting cancer, it was mostly carrots, a beet, a big handful of leafy greens such as spinach or dandelion, and a apple. The last supposedly " pulls " more minerals from the veggies as well as supplying some of its own (such as boron). These days, I'm doing greens exclusively, mostly celery, but also some veggies and herbs reputed to detoxify heavy metals (cilantro, for instance). I have a Norwalk (based on the work of Norman ) juicer which is extremely expensive, but when I was told that cancer patients were more apt to recover using this juicer than any other (this statement was *not* from the juicer company),I felt I should invest the money. I think it produces the most fiber-free juice, which means less stress on the digestive system in absorbing the nutrients. <And also, how much clay do you take? I was under the impression that you couldn't take the clay long term because it would prevent you from absorbing minerals in you food. You don't seem to have a problem with that. Well, first let me say the juicing has been long-term, but the clay is only within the last year. However, my understanding is that some clays do indeed absorb good nutrients as well as toxins from the body, and these should never be ingested. Both the terramin and the French green clay can supposedly be used on a long-term basis. There's lots of info online (one source is http://www.shirleys-wellness-cafe.com/clay.htm) and also in print (a good intro is " The Clay Cure " by Ran Knishinsky.) There may be better ways to improve dental health and there may be other things that have improved my own dental health (for instance, giving up all grains) without my realizing quite how that happened, but I do think the juicing and the clay have been major contributors. I hope you find what is best for you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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