Best remedies and interventions for receding gums?
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Following this thread
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@Jennifer
That detail helps, thank you. Maybe I'll start with taking the tea, and make a small amount of tincture from the tea base for future testing.I have read that bloodroot is very strong and stories similar to what you mention, where it was too caustic, but that was the black salve. My thought is to buy a pre-made tincture with it, so it would be already diluted. Either that, or make my own tincture with vodka and just make sure It's diluted.
That is exactly my objective with the pro-progesterone aspects of bloodroot: to get the benefits of progesterone without what I'd call feminizing effects that Progest-E gives me.
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@Mossy, I think your plan is sound. If you find you aren’t tolerating bloodroot or even the Heal All tea, as mentioned above, there’s always oregano. It’s effective for oral conditions like gum disease and raising progesterone levels and in an email exchange, Ray said it’s one of the safest spices:
“[Oregano oil] It's one of the safest spices (low allergenicity, not mutagenic or carcinogenic), so if it isn't combined with harmful excipients it seems worth trying.” Ray Peat
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@Jennifer
I have a hope that the tea will be the mildest of all my options — meaning, no bad side effects. I do remember reading about oregano on RPF and someone having good results for gums and oral health. I have made an extract with oregano in vodka, but gargling and rinsing with it was so harsh it got me sick. I may test that again, more diluted. I do have the oil diluted as well. Oregano is such a potent herb, I think I conveniently forgot about it after my experience with it. For me. it doesn't have the appeal of other spices where its scent and taste are appealing, like cinnamon, anise, or cardamom. Even strong clove I think is a more appealing than oregano. Even so, I will put it back on my list of things to retry. I wasn't aware of the progesterone properties of it. That is good to know — and good to know Peat likes it. -
@Mossy, I think you’re wise to go by what herbs appeal to you. That’s something I do and something even Dr. Morse, a man who has a love for all herbs, suggests. In regards to oregano’s potency, I’ve used pharmaceutical grade oregano oil from Greece that leaked and melted the plastic box it came in, it was that strong, and it was just as harsh on my insides (lol) so I understand what you mean. The only way I will take oregano now is in the form of an infusion/tea or the raw herb sprinkled in my food for flavoring.
Some assume the greater the potency, the greater the healing or that if it’s natural, it’s inherently safe, but that’s not always the case. One herb that comes to mind is belladonna. Prior to supplementing thyroid, when I still had gallbladder disease and daily gallbladder attacks, a friend I had on the old RPF asked Ray for suggestions and he said atropine to relax the bile duct. Belladonna contains atropine—it’s the source of the crude drug—but is highly toxic to domestic animals and at certain potencies has been shown to poison humans—early humans made poisonous arrows from it—so I bought some belladonna homeopathic pellets knowing that the amount of belladonna they contain is minute and they worked! It took thyroid to overcome the gallbladder disease—Ray said in an interview that anyone with gallbladder disease is without exception chronically hypothyroid—but the belladonna pellets brought relief until I was able to convince a doctor to prescribe me thyroid.