VIDEO: Pinhole Treatment for Receding Gums

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  • čas přidán 4. 04. 2018
  • For one out of 10 people who wore braces, the end result isn’t a perfect smile. That’s because they develop receding gums. Treatment typically involves expensive and painful grafting, but there’s a new treatment that has no scalpel, no stitches, and very little recovery time.

Komentáře • 5

  • @marlonvite4152
    @marlonvite4152 Před 4 lety +5

    Our mistake number 1 is: letting our dentists use their turbine with their abrasives and ultra heat produced by the high spinning mini grinder to "clean" our teeth instead of hand scraping the tartar away...........This dentist process should be stopped because it first cuts the gum margin i.e. seal or connection of the gum to the teeth, this is why the bleeding at the dentist's "cleaning". This "cleaning" polishes the microscopic structure of the teeth margin that allows the gum to attach itself to the teeth. The dentist grinder/polisher's heat burns it killing this important live margin line between gum and teeth and the gum no longer can grip, hold or root itself onto anything from each tooth and recedes because now the tooth margin line is burnt/polished smooth.......If a similar cleaning was done onto the achilles tendon to bone one would not be able to stand ever. The ultra fast spinning and abrasive pastes and heat by your dentist is like having a regular tooth brush and dental paste going over the gum/tooth margin line millions of times in seconds and this is way more damaging than regular cold tooth brush cleaning. Such ignorant common practice by dentist is the main reason ........ Dentists ignorantly blame it on bad brushing....... Next time you visit your dentist you might want to sternly. say what I say "no turbine cleaning on my teeth"

    • @aznboy131
      @aznboy131 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Well, this is just straight-up misinformation. Hopefully, you’re aware that those tools you describe (poorly) aren’t used on cementum that already has keratinized gum tissue attachment. They’re used on exposed tooth surface. And if those exposed surfaces happen to include areas that were attached to gum tissue in the past, then there’s no hope of those spots reattaching to the gums anyway without connective tissue and/or bone grafting.
      Gums are pretty resilient structures. You can literally use a scalpel to filet the gums away from the tooth roots for a surgical procedure, and as long as there’s no plaque or calculus in the way, they’ll reattach to the roots after being sutured back into place.

    • @marlonvite4152
      @marlonvite4152 Před 2 měsíci

      @@aznboy131 thanks for your opinion... you sound like an expert, are you an expert? If you are an expert, please tell me (us) what causes gum recession .... also, please tell us how you have cured gum recession on your clients (pacients), and how you have prevented gum recession on those that you have cured, and how much (aproximately) costs in USD average in the USA .... or if you are not an expert then you are as me trying to discover answers to my questions .... I happened to have 3 practicing dentists in my family, one my older brother (retired last year), 2 nieces dentists since about 15 years .... all reading here would appreciate your feedback

    • @aznboy131
      @aznboy131 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@marlonvite4152 I am a dentist, if that's what you're asking. It doesn't seem like you're asking questions in good faith, but I'll play along in case you're genuinely curious. The causes of gingival recession are myriad and multifactorial, ranging from physiologic in nature to pathogenic, traumatic, and even genetic. It can also be any combination of these factors. Before taking the discussion any further though, I think we have to acknowledge that you don't seem to understand the difference between the gingival margin (gumline) and the attachment point (base of the gum pocket/gingival sulcus).
      Look up an image of the gingival sulcus in cross-section, and ask your dentist relatives to help you understand the anatomy. Then realize that - just as the gumline and connective tissue attachment are distinct anatomic features - so too are gum recession and clinical attachment loss different pathologies. The two are linked, but they are not the same thing, and the treatments for them are different.

    • @marlonvite4152
      @marlonvite4152 Před 2 měsíci

      @aznboy131 thanks for replying ... I have read plenty ... I understand what I read.... I read your reply ... yours is common .... I assume as you do many consequences .... there are many blind dentists as I am in my gum recession condition, and even the 3 loving dentists in my own family can not provide me with the cure. They, too, are blind as I .... I could too copy and paste scientific research that neither produces reproducible cure nor prevention for many of us out there.... if I were to hire you, will you cure my gum recession for good?