Confidence
0.30
Practicability
0.60
Evidence
0.20
Fringe Score
0.80
Risk
0.30
TRL
3
Goal
Prevent and reverse tooth cavities, gingivitis and fluoride-related enamel damage.
Problem
Dental cavities, gum infection, enamel degradation caused by acids and fluoride exposure.
Concept Summary
A regimen that eliminates acid exposure by rinsing while eating, cleans teeth with bar soap, and supplies the body with calcium, vitamin D, monosodium phosphate and sodium ascorbate to promote natural remineralization of enamel. Fluoride is avoided because it is claimed to damage enzymes and increase disease.
Principles
- Acid neutralization by immediate rinsing with water or milk
- Mechanical cleaning with bar soap to remove barriers and kill bacteria
- Supplemental calcium and vitamin D to provide phosphate for enamel rebuilding
- Monosodium phosphate to increase soluble phosphate availability
- Sodium ascorbate (fresh vitamin C) to support gum connective-tissue health
- Avoidance of fluoride and sugary foods
Scientific Domains
Materials
- Bar soap (sodium stearate-based)
- Calcium carbonate or calcium citrate tablets
- Vitamin D (cholecalciferol) tablets
- Monosodium phosphate (food-grade)
- Sodium ascorbate (freshly prepared)
- Water
- Milk
Mechanisms of Action
- Acid-induced enamel dissolution is halted by dilution and neutralization
- Calcium-phosphate precipitation restores enamel mineral content
- Vitamin D facilitates calcium transport to teeth
- Phosphate supplies the hydroxy-apatite lattice
- Sodium ascorbate promotes collagen synthesis in gums
- Bar soap removes organic films and reduces bacterial load
Applications
- Personal oral hygiene
- Preventive dentistry
- Community health programs
Claimed Performance
Following the regimen will eliminate all cavities, gingivitis and fluoride-induced enamel damage worldwide.
Experimental Evidence
The author cites literature references and personal observations but provides no independent, peer-reviewed data or controlled trials supporting the regimen.
Limitations
- No controlled clinical trials reported
- Reliance on strict personal adherence
- Potential nutrient excess if supplements are over-taken
- Bar soap may be unacceptable to some users
Red Flags
- Claims that bacteria cannot cause cavities contradict established dental microbiology
- Statements that fluoride is lethal at low concentrations lack corroborating toxicological data
- Absence of peer-reviewed experimental results