Dale Bradburn
@Seekeroftruth1776
09 April, 03:34
Another prediction coming true! I predicted a couple of years ago that we will have new dentistry with the ability to regrow teeth. https://thepremierdaily.co...
The Premier Daily (https://thepremierdaily.co...
New Treatment Makes Teeth Grow Back
A new antibody treatment made lab animals regrow missing teeth. If it works on people, dentistry will never be the same.
The Premier Daily (https://thepremierdaily.co...
New Treatment Makes Teeth Grow Back
A new antibody treatment made lab animals regrow missing teeth. If it works on people, dentistry will never be the same.
New Treatment Makes Teeth Grow Back
Scientists in Japan have development a new treatment that makes teeth grow back. This is everything they know so far.
https://thepremierdaily.com/teeth-grow-back/?WIBY=mFplDd&fbclid=IwAR3xIov3pNKFqVEhUevuZ1j5CTstBSThq-OR74RgCsh_8gtbdOjqNI-wPjINotice: Undefined index: tg1tga_access in /home/admin/www/anonup.com/themes/default/apps/timeline/post.phtml on line 396
I would love to regrow my extracted tooth. It had to go after a botched root canal left me in agony for weeks. Can’t wait for all these new treatments.
07:20 AM - Apr 12, 2022
In response Dale Bradburn to his Publication
Only people mentioned by ShinySHINY in this post can reply
Ask Yourself
@AskYourself_45
12 April, 03:48
In response Lisa Newnham to her Publication
My very first root canal resulted in a totally lost tooth less than six months later. Every time I heard “root canal” after that I said no, just pull it now and save me the professional reasoning and unnecessary extra charges. Three molar teeth were pulled/lost over time.
My question, if history is even remotely legit, how do older skeletons seem to have a complete or decent set of teeth on their skull? I understand life spans have changed, but I also had my first root canal in my twenties, so it is not just that everyone died younger.
No more flouride, no more amalgam (mercury fillings under a pretty name), no no no...
I suppose it is easier to identify dental records when you hack away at everyone’s face over time, and they used to regularly use dental records to identify a deceased person after an accident or whatever.
My question, if history is even remotely legit, how do older skeletons seem to have a complete or decent set of teeth on their skull? I understand life spans have changed, but I also had my first root canal in my twenties, so it is not just that everyone died younger.
No more flouride, no more amalgam (mercury fillings under a pretty name), no no no...
I suppose it is easier to identify dental records when you hack away at everyone’s face over time, and they used to regularly use dental records to identify a deceased person after an accident or whatever.
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