Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Dean/Worse after removal

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

~Nahla: That is so interesting. Thank you for letting me know. I will have my

dentist test the polarity on the day we will remove amalgams. Did you happen to

learn anything about crossing the mid-line?

Huggins is quite clear: NEVER, NEVER cross the midline in a single dental

treatment on a normal injection anaesthetic. If however, for reasons that are

still unclear, you use a 'conscious sedation' anaesthetic, you can then cross

the midline in a single session, and in his words (I think) - you can then 'work

upside down and back to front.' The conscious sedation somehow shuts down the

electrical effect of the brain, or something like that?

Anyway the lymph systems drain different on each side of the face and the neural

systems have cross-over. I would follow the rules if at all possible

For info here

http://www.livingnetwork.co.za/healingnetwork/mercury_amalgam_removal.html

Also use the 7-14-21 day rule. Meaning don't schedule a dental appointment 7 -

14 - or 21 days after a previous dental appointment, or after any other immune

stressing event for that matter.

After having seen many people move through the dental cleanup I would have to

say that I have seen too many people get hurt by bad-protocol mistakes that they

didn't think would matter. Huggins has seen several thousand people go through.

I'm inclined to go with him on matter of safe removal, and follow Andy on matter

of safe chelation.

Dean

Link to comment
Share on other sites

~Nahla: That is so interesting. Thank you for letting me know. I will have my

dentist test the polarity on the day we will remove amalgams. Did you happen to

learn anything about crossing the mid-line?

Huggins is quite clear: NEVER, NEVER cross the midline in a single dental

treatment on a normal injection anaesthetic. If however, for reasons that are

still unclear, you use a 'conscious sedation' anaesthetic, you can then cross

the midline in a single session, and in his words (I think) - you can then 'work

upside down and back to front.' The conscious sedation somehow shuts down the

electrical effect of the brain, or something like that?

Anyway the lymph systems drain different on each side of the face and the neural

systems have cross-over. I would follow the rules if at all possible

For info here

http://www.livingnetwork.co.za/healingnetwork/mercury_amalgam_removal.html

Also use the 7-14-21 day rule. Meaning don't schedule a dental appointment 7 -

14 - or 21 days after a previous dental appointment, or after any other immune

stressing event for that matter.

After having seen many people move through the dental cleanup I would have to

say that I have seen too many people get hurt by bad-protocol mistakes that they

didn't think would matter. Huggins has seen several thousand people go through.

I'm inclined to go with him on matter of safe removal, and follow Andy on matter

of safe chelation.

Dean

Link to comment
Share on other sites

~Nahla: That is so interesting. Thank you for letting me know. I will have my

dentist test the polarity on the day we will remove amalgams. Did you happen to

learn anything about crossing the mid-line?

Huggins is quite clear: NEVER, NEVER cross the midline in a single dental

treatment on a normal injection anaesthetic. If however, for reasons that are

still unclear, you use a 'conscious sedation' anaesthetic, you can then cross

the midline in a single session, and in his words (I think) - you can then 'work

upside down and back to front.' The conscious sedation somehow shuts down the

electrical effect of the brain, or something like that?

Anyway the lymph systems drain different on each side of the face and the neural

systems have cross-over. I would follow the rules if at all possible

For info here

http://www.livingnetwork.co.za/healingnetwork/mercury_amalgam_removal.html

Also use the 7-14-21 day rule. Meaning don't schedule a dental appointment 7 -

14 - or 21 days after a previous dental appointment, or after any other immune

stressing event for that matter.

After having seen many people move through the dental cleanup I would have to

say that I have seen too many people get hurt by bad-protocol mistakes that they

didn't think would matter. Huggins has seen several thousand people go through.

I'm inclined to go with him on matter of safe removal, and follow Andy on matter

of safe chelation.

Dean

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Huggins has seen several thousand people go through. I'm inclined to go with him

on matter of safe removal, and follow Andy on matter of safe chelation.

Dean

-------------------------

I'm inclined to agree with you Dean, Huggins has seen many dental revisions, and

as much as possible, following his protocol for removal is probably wise. My

dentist also followed the 7-14-21 day rule, and my appointments were always

different days of the week. And I came to the same conclusion, follow Andy for

safe chelation! And I haven't been disappointed!--------Jackie >T

Re: Dean/Worse after removal

~Nahla: That is so interesting. Thank you for letting me know. I will have my

dentist test the polarity on the day we will remove amalgams. Did you happen to

learn anything about crossing the mid-line?

Huggins is quite clear: NEVER, NEVER cross the midline in a single dental

treatment on a normal injection anaesthetic. If however, for reasons that are

still unclear, you use a 'conscious sedation' anaesthetic, you can then cross

the midline in a single session, and in his words (I think) - you can then 'work

upside down and back to front.' The conscious sedation somehow shuts down the

electrical effect of the brain, or something like that?

Anyway the lymph systems drain different on each side of the face and the

neural systems have cross-over. I would follow the rules if at all possible

For info here

http://www.livingnetwork.co.za/healingnetwork/mercury_amalgam_removal.html

Also use the 7-14-21 day rule. Meaning don't schedule a dental appointment 7 -

14 - or 21 days after a previous dental appointment, or after any other immune

stressing event for that matter.

After having seen many people move through the dental cleanup I would have to

say that I have seen too many people get hurt by bad-protocol mistakes that they

didn't think would matter. Huggins has seen several thousand people go through.

I'm inclined to go with him on matter of safe removal, and follow Andy on matter

of safe chelation.

Dean

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Huggins has seen several thousand people go through. I'm inclined to go with him

on matter of safe removal, and follow Andy on matter of safe chelation.

Dean

-------------------------

I'm inclined to agree with you Dean, Huggins has seen many dental revisions, and

as much as possible, following his protocol for removal is probably wise. My

dentist also followed the 7-14-21 day rule, and my appointments were always

different days of the week. And I came to the same conclusion, follow Andy for

safe chelation! And I haven't been disappointed!--------Jackie >T

Re: Dean/Worse after removal

~Nahla: That is so interesting. Thank you for letting me know. I will have my

dentist test the polarity on the day we will remove amalgams. Did you happen to

learn anything about crossing the mid-line?

Huggins is quite clear: NEVER, NEVER cross the midline in a single dental

treatment on a normal injection anaesthetic. If however, for reasons that are

still unclear, you use a 'conscious sedation' anaesthetic, you can then cross

the midline in a single session, and in his words (I think) - you can then 'work

upside down and back to front.' The conscious sedation somehow shuts down the

electrical effect of the brain, or something like that?

Anyway the lymph systems drain different on each side of the face and the

neural systems have cross-over. I would follow the rules if at all possible

For info here

http://www.livingnetwork.co.za/healingnetwork/mercury_amalgam_removal.html

Also use the 7-14-21 day rule. Meaning don't schedule a dental appointment 7 -

14 - or 21 days after a previous dental appointment, or after any other immune

stressing event for that matter.

After having seen many people move through the dental cleanup I would have to

say that I have seen too many people get hurt by bad-protocol mistakes that they

didn't think would matter. Huggins has seen several thousand people go through.

I'm inclined to go with him on matter of safe removal, and follow Andy on matter

of safe chelation.

Dean

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...