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- jawbone storing toxins/heavy metals etc.

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This is what I mean - Here is an example:

Evidence will be presented from the latest research of top German

toxicologist Max Daunderer,M.D. that the entire jaw bone (upper and

lower jaw) has become for most of us a toxic waste dump for the

following materials:

Pesticides

Solvents (see also A.R.T.manual) ( mostly lower jaw)

Formaldehyde (mostly lower jaw)

Amalgam ( mercury, tin, copper, silver) (jawbone and max.sinus)

Palladium (from gold crowns) (mostly upper jaw)

All other dental materials to a lesser degree

Through biopsies Daunderer found, that virtually all inhaled toxins

are stored in the jaw bone in the areas adjacent to the root tips.

Metals and toxins leave characteristic changes in the jaw bone:

Amalgam on the dental roots: spiral like brightness around the roots;

white slice like brightness between the molar roots

Amalgam-lake: soft, nebulous wide level at the bottom of the

maxillary sinus

Gold on the roots: bright, hard strips around the roots

Gold-lake: bright, hard level at the bottom of the maxillary sinus

Palladium on the roots: the outline of the root appears to be hazy,

as if the root is dissolving

Palladium-lake: one or more horizontal stripes at the bottom of the

max.sinus, often underneath the amalgam level

Other metals: aluminum, lead, bismuth etc. leave soft white dots

around the roots or the neck of the tooth

Inhaled toxins: Daunderer was able to determine the age of the toxin

exposure according to how deep the toxin has spread from the

supplying artery into the jaw-bone. If the toxin reaches all the way

to the cortical bone, the inhalation dates back more then 30 years.

Formaldehyde: Pinhead size white dots, which are perfectly round in

the area of the angle of the jaw, stripe like at the edge of the jaw

bone

Mercury: soft, white nebulous level at the bottom of the sinus. In

extreme cases also as soft white spots in the ascending part of the

mandible.

Palladium: inhaled palladium comes i.e. from car-catalytic

converters. It settles at the bottom of the sinus as rough, thin line

or several lines

Platinum: from car cat.converters, settles as soft line at the bottom

of the sinus, especially, if the patient is already mercury toxic

Solvents: inhaled solvents form dark round circular deposits -like a

lake -in the ascending part of the mandible. The age can be assessed

by location

Pesticides: PCP, n etc. look like the solvent-lakes, but have a

sharp, white margin

Smoking: outlines the blood vessels in the jaw

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> What do you mean, the jaw stores heavy metals and toxins anyway?

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