reSee.it Podcast Summary
Health begins in the mouth, the speakers insist, arguing that infections and inflammation often start there rather than in distant organs. A live exercise on metal in the mouth—root canals, wisdom teeth—becomes a running thread: the oral microbiome, leaky gum, and the idea that the mouth is not a garage but a gateway to the body. They cite that 87 to 90 percent of autoimmune diseases are idiopathic and propose that mold, mycotoxins, parasites, viruses, and heavy metals from the mouth can summon immune reactions. If heavy metals are removed, they say, detox is considered only after four months, once sites of infection are addressed.
They describe a movement toward biology-first dentistry: certify practitioners, standardize education, and change the system so dentists become holistic health experts rather than technicians. The plan calls for a global standard for biologic dentistry, a shift away from routine root canals toward strategies that remove sources of infection, cavitations, and heavy metals, and toward tooth replacement methods that respect the body's immune terrain. The speakers link this to broader health outcomes, from brain signaling to chronic fatigue and inflammatory disease, and they frame the mouth as the gateway through which diet, toxins, and microbes influence systemic health. They emphasize patient advocacy and mass education as drivers of change.
Audience questions touch practicalities: partial wisdom teeth infections, 3D cone-beam scans, tongue-tie and myofunctional therapy, and the link between orthodontics and posture. A caller notes cancer later linked to cavitations; the panel argues diagnosis requires seeing systemic connections and that imaging can reveal chronic issues dentists miss. They discuss heavy-metal detox timing, warning that detox should follow removal of sources from the mouth, and that provoked urine testing may reveal metals after chelation. They also propose immediate ceramic implants as a pain-free alternative to redoing a root canal, followed by months of healing and nutrition-driven rebuilding. The goal is to train clinicians and patients to treat the mouth as part of overall health.