12 Comments
Jun 27Liked by Dr Margaret Aranda

What are a dental patient’s alternative options? What should one express to their dentist?

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Some say to just ask for gas instead of local anesthetic, but as an anesthesiologist, that puts your airway, lungs, and brain at increased risk of trouble, not to mention death.

From a comment on Will's article:

VJCBingham

THE PARALLEL UNIVERSE

Jun 26

Dioxi-Care dental products are excellent.. all based on Chlorine Dioxide.. as they come in 2 bottles that you mix prior to use. The founder was working with CDS already in the 60's! I use those plus a daily spray of Hydrochlorous Acid. It has eliminated every mouth concern, even destroying infection in my 'dental war veteran' mouth. (Ground teeth to powder in my youth, and lost many over time.) I thank God for these inexpensive products, as currently I hesitate to see a dentist and take chances with tainted anesthesia.

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Another reader says levobupivicaine was tested as clean:

John Vargo

13 hrs ago

Levobupivacaine,on the other hand I'm sceptical about that so would be nice if it was tested under a scope.

Dee Coote

Pure Spirit by Dee Coote

13 hrs ago

Thank you for the correction John. My references come from Diane kazer who works with a team. It’s my understanding that they have been testing and levo was the one that is clean. Of course everyone should do their own research. Another source of information to confirm would be great. 👍

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And My FAV:

Patti Kay Wooldridge RN BSN

Jun 19

Hylichrism essential oil was used by a pt. of mine for her oral surgery that took over an hour. Dentist made her sign release form injury papers. So she said she liberally put it all over the surgical area and had no pain. She only had the Dentist stop once to reapply the oil during the surgery.

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Jun 27Liked by Dr Margaret Aranda

Thank you for the response, Dr. Aranda.

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You know that I cannot keep you waiting for an answer:)

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Dear Dr. Margaret , is there anyway to test to find out if the anesthetics they gave me at the dentist's 2 years ago, were the BIO-WEAPON?

😉🫡🙏🙏🙏🙌

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Jun 27·edited Jun 27Author

I don't know.

This is from a comment on Will's article:

Richard Rader

Richard’s Substack

Jun 24

Hi will Ultracain was the anestetic we tested 2014 had Nothing strange but 2024 was loaded with Nano teck objects... Stange anttenae arrays and pyramids with two pointsand smart city blueprints Location Spain. RR

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Also:

Max Bliss

6 hrs ago

I have 10 vials of anesthetic that I’ve looked at and the newer ones look like Wills, but the outdated ones do not! There expiration dates are 2023 or older! You might ask your dentist or call them all in your area to see if they have outdated vials. It’s worth a try!!

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Jun 27Liked by Dr Margaret Aranda

You know this needs to be addressed. I had a tooth extraction a couple months ago and I debated about talking to the surgeon about it. I ended up not saying anything because if he knows he is using tainted anesthetic then is he really going to admit it? Do dentists even know how to check this stuff under a microscope? I doubt it. But somebody that does needs to do a study of it. Nobody likes going to the dentist but if you have an emergency with a painful tooth, you will do about anything to get it to go away!!

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Absolutely there are people who never go to a dentist - I am one of them - and those who have to repeatedly go or else be miserable. For these reasons, I am willing to repeat the experiments but only with the right equipment, or let someone else verify them as well.

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Jun 27Liked by Dr Margaret Aranda

There is observable reiterative symmetry and movement in the architecture and its artifacts akin to electromagnetic conductivity. Not saying it is.

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Yes, I agree. Someone on Will's article recommended putting tiny electrodes then adding a microcurrent to see if it accelerates the process. Excellent thought!

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Speaking of gas, one problem I see in the presentation is the Common Ion Effect. Inviting Hydrochloric Acid (HCl) and Sodium Bisulfite (NaHSO3) to this pool party, means nobody leaves with the date who brought them!

Let an extra H go swimming with HSO3 and faster than you can dial the divorce lawyer, SO2 split apart from OH, then OH paired up with the other H that Cl brought to the party. H plus OH yields more H2O that lingers in the pool, and SO2, a gas at room temperature, bubbles out of the pool and pollutes the air. Na and Cl need to find a ride home together because their partners just dumped them.

So a

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problem I see here is that we do not genuinely have the same ingredients that were mixed in the bottle. We have SO2 gas that boils out of mixture as it is made, and some may still be in the medication when it is dispensed. That alone could account for the bubbles we are seeing.

Anytime I see lumpy things floating in liquids, the first place I look are the steps by which the ingredients were sourced, mixed, and packaged. (This is a non-trivial exercise in the microchip business. A tiny lump of graphene oxide that fell off a shaft bearing of a mixer that mixed one of the reagents used to make the chip, if not rinsed off, can fall where it causes an electrical short circuit, and a $200 chip not working, causes a $5,000 circuit board not to run properly, leading to a $200,000 server to crash, data to be erased, and litigation begun. Chip companies pay folks like me to chase down these problems before they happen).

Now in making meds for injection, unknown lumpy things also deserve scrutiny, because once injected in the patient, a lump that will not metabolize creates an obstruction in whatever blood vessel it lodged in.

I would not waste my time sourcing individual ingredients. I would obtain a sample of real Orabloc and hunt for those same lumps in the image, isolate them, then run a scanning electron microscope exam of the lumps at high magnification and then again use the EDX feature of the SEM to run an element-by-element search of each lump, and figure out what they are and how they got there.

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