this post was submitted on 17 Nov 2024
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Hmmm I'll live with my coffee stained teeth, thanks
for it, it's not a requirement.
oil pulling is specifically for people who want to whiten their teeth, not for everybody who drinks coffee.
I also have a friend who oil pulled for her sensitive teeth and told me it worked. Coconut oil also has antibacterial (if Iโm remembering correctly) properties that supposedly help fight gum disease. Not positive about that one though
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xv-A6rSUM8c
this video convinced me that oil pulling is antimicrobial even though the professed conclusion of the video, as espoused by the dentist working with the YouTuber, is that oil pulling doesn't work, even though there are less bacteria present after the oil pulling.
before oil pulling: every squiggly purple line inside the empty spaces is a separate spirochete.
I counted well over a dozen spirochetes wiggling around before the oil pulling.
it zooms in on one little corridor near the end of the "before" microscope analysis, and in just that one little corridor, you can plainly see half a dozen spirochetes wiggling together.
after The oil pulling:
there's very clearly only one in the entire slide, and the dentist mentions this specifically, but says since there are any spirochetes at all, there's no difference before and after.
after the oil pulling with that on screen, the dentist specifically says "there's no such thing as one mouse" while examining the patient after oil pulling, so you know he's looking at one spirochete on screen, and you can also plainly only see one on screen, while before the oil pulling, the dentist videos are full of spirochetes, zoomed in or out.
by what you can count on screen before and after, there are more than 90% fewer bacteria found after the oil pulling, so it seems like oil pulling works for gum disease, at least for this patient.
I'd love to see more studies on this.
or a follow-up to that video.