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Getting Rid of Bad Breath Metastatically

September 24, 2010

The protozoa or microbe that is responsible for your bad breath, feeds on and use your post nasal drip from protection.  Sometimes, the post nasal drip is just a result of genetics. However if you have chronic halitosis, it might be as a result of fungi or other microbes in the sinus cavities. The microbes cause an excess formation of mucous which in turn goes down onto the back of your throat.

To get rid of pathogen from your sinus, you need snuff tobacco.

If you smoke or are addicted to nicotine, you might have to find something else. As i don’t smoke I’ve used this method only 3 times with my post nasal drip getting smaller and smaller with each successive use.

Procedure:

1.  Cut a small piece of paper in a conical fashion, so that it is able to fit into you nostrils.

Conical Paper Roll

Conical Paper Roll

2. Fold it, to prevent the snuff from fall out of the other end, and then pour some snuff tobacco into the paper roll.

Pour Snuff into Paper Roll

Pour Snuff into Paper Roll

3. While holding shut one nostril, put the snuff filled paper roll, all the way up to said nostril, and sniff with great force.

4. Repeat procedure for the second nostril.

5.  Slowly, a water discharge will trickle from your nose, but do not blow your nose until you see the fully dark brown stuff attempting to come down. You will be doing so prematurely. For me this took up to 7 minutes, it might take between 5- 10 minutes for normal people.  If you have post nasal drip some of it will run down your glossopalatine arch.

Anecdotes
–Depending on texture of the snuff (i.e. how fine of a powder you have), and also depending on the person, you might have sneezing fits.  While browsing various snuff forums, i saw that different people have different reactions to the snuff.
— As said above with each successive use, my post nasal drip is nearly gone,At the time of this post I’ve had only 3 applications  of snuff tobacco so far.  This drip has stopped totally on my left side, and is now down to a trickle on the right side.I will probably do this procedure two more times before i stop altogether. Some people on snuff forums have claimed that constant use of snuff has cured their postnasal drip.

Vulnerability of the Glossopaltine Arch

September 22, 2010

Your Glossopalatine Arch naturally has it own mucous, but the integrity of this mucous membrane might be compromised due to a number of varying factors.
Including;
-inadvertently swallowing (through both mouth and nose), chlorinated water from a swimming pool,
-excessive use of over the counter mouthwashes,
-excessive use of antibiotics,
-impaired appendix leading to impaired tonsils,
-Genetics.

With any of this criteria in play, opportunistic anaerobic fungi or protozoa could then invade the lining on the glossopalatine wall, thereby causing halitosis

Getting Rid of Chronic Bad Breath Locally

September 17, 2010

Ever spent 25 minutes, brushing your teeth and tongue, only for people to recoil when you open your mouth?  To get rid of bad breath, you need to take a holistic approach, attacking the microbes but locally and systemically. We will deal with the systemic method in a later blog post.

Most chronic bad breath is caused by  opportunistic anaerobic fungi that resides in the pocket of your glossopalatine arch.

Palatine Arches

Palatine Arches

To Clean out the pocket of you glossopalatine arch you need:
— An electric spin brush with a circular head.
— Toothpaste.
— Gly-oxide (with 10% carbamide peroxide)
— 3% hydrogen peroxide
— xylitol Mouth rinse
–Cotton swabs

[Do not waste you money buying special toothpaste from scam artists]

Procedure:
1. Brush your teeth and tongue with toothpaste, like normal. Put 2-4 drops of Carbamide Peroxide on your toothbrush, and brush the back of your tongue with it, including the space between you tonsils and your tongue dorsum. Do not put too much on your brush as excessive foaming can causing the Carbamide Peroxide to get into your trachea, preventing you from breathing for more than a minute (i speak from experience). With the foam generated from this action, maneuver your electric brushed to enter into the glossopalatine arch groove.  You must get the brush all the way up and down this groove, to be able to detach the fungi thoroughly.

Brush the tongue dorsum and tonsil corner... ...Brush the groove of the Glossopalatine Arch

Brushing fully inside the Glossopalatine Arch

Brushing fully inside the Glossopalatine Arch

2. Do not be overaggressive, as you have to do this over a couple of days. Because the fungi has been feeding on your blood for a while, on the first day you will some blood coming out, similar to when you floss. The fungi also feeds (and might also be causing) your post nasal drip, so you will also see a lot of mucus, and debris that has collected over the years.

3. After brushing,  rinse your mouth with water first, and then after a few minutes rinse with Water and hydrogen peroxide. When you gargle normally, your tongue blocks anything from getting to this arch groove. To do so properly, gargle this hydrogen peroxide  water mix by making a slight aaah sound  when gargling, so that the mix can get into those arches. It’s easier doing it in front of a mirror.

4. After this rinse, wait 2-3 minutes, use any sort of contraption to get a cotton swab soaked in carbamide peroxide to the groove of those arches. In my case i used the plier,scotch tape, and bent the cotton swab.
Plier with cotton bud attachedCotton bud bentCarbamide peroxide poured into small containerCotton swab dipped into carbamide peroxide
Put the peroxide dipped swab into the glossopalatine groove

5. After a little bit you might feel the need to cough or conjure phlegm, do that, rinse, and then for fresh breath use any xylitol based mouth wash, to prevent regrowth.

Anecdote: On my first day the amount of crap, debris, junk that came out was mind boggling, but the C. peroxide reacted with a lot of the material, and so it didn’t look bad except the blood. After trying this procedure the first day, i woke up the next morning with less saliva in my mouth than any other day. Normally for me my mouth would be full of Saliva and drool, most likely a reaction of my salivary glands to the amount of toxins being put in my mouth by the fungi.
—  After 5 days the blood from the left side of my mouth had stopped completely. The right side kept bleeding for 8 days. I’m writing this article on day 12 of trying this procedure. I tried going and speaking to people, with no reaction, i asked my mom, if she could smell anything she said no. My bad breath is gone.

–For now you should be able to lead a normal life. Please post a comment below if this has worked for you.

In my next blog post I will be talking about how to get rid of this Fungi from your system, if it is in your blood or organs, and also from your sinus, if it is causing your post nasal drip.

Modes of Microbial Infestations for Chronic Halitosis

September 14, 2010

I have identified three different modes of infestations of microbes that cause chronis halitosis:

1. Local:  In this case, the microbe is present, only in the mouth,  and is the result of the overgrowth of normal oral flora, or the result of the opportunistic invasion of an external microbe, following the destruction of the oral flora.

2.Metastatic: This is the result of the infection of an adjacent cavity (usually the sinus). The infection then proceeds from its inital point of origin to the oral cavity.

3. Systemic:  In this case the initial infestation is at a distal part of the body, like the intestine, the microbe then proceeds through various pathways, especially the blood, and finds various points of attachment  in the Oral and Sinus cavities.

There obviously could be an overlap or a combination of modes for each individual halitosis patient.