A dentist in Oregon, who knew nothing about Ipsab, treated an A.R.E. member early this year for what he diagnosed as pyorrhea. When the patient got no relief from the discomfort of her inflamed gums, she wrote for the circulating file on pyorrhea. She finally got some Ipsab from Virginia Beach and started using that on her gums. After one week, she reports: “My gums cleared up some and the swelling went down. Another week of use, they were no longer sore or red and at this time [after three weeks] they are in good shape.”
Ipsab was tested by a practicing Virginia dentist in a double-blind study involving 39 patients. ‘The results were statistically significant and showed very good to excellent results in one out of three test patients while only one out of 17 control patients was found in this category. An interesting study!
Dental problems are not limited to pyorrhea nor their treatment to Ipsab, although the latter is amazingly efficacious in a variety of dental problems. Another A.R.E. member sought a solution to the problem of a tooth with an infected root that showed troubles on X-ray. He was not eager to have it extracted, so he used a bit of creative ingenuity and adapted some of the ideas he had read about in the Cayce material. Twice a day, he would swab the gums around the tooth with Atomidine. Then he took a pledget of cotton saturated with castor oil and placed it between the gum and the cheek. Against his face, then, he placed a heating pad and lay down on a couch to rest for an hour. Twice daily he repeated this routine. After two weeks, the gums around the tooth became swollen and tender – this subsided during the next few days, and at the end of three weeks, the swelling was gone, and the soreness was easing up. After the fourth week, the tenderness and the swelling were clearly absent. He was able to chew with the tooth and there was no sign of trouble. He has not had it X-rayed, but it “feels” cured. I don’t have a dental opinion on this, obviously, but it occurs to me that there is a possibility that the root nerve to the tooth might be dead at this point. Time will tell the story, but the patient has a functioning tooth, which he considers to be better than no tooth at all. I would not argue the point.
[† July, 1975, Volume 10, No. 4, page 170, Copyright © 1975 by the Edgar Cayce Foundation, Virginia Beach, VA.]
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