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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Oral Health / How to Save a Damaged Tooth With No Root Canal

How to Save a Damaged Tooth With No Root Canal

by Kay Watts / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Homeopathy Instead of a Root Canal
  • Looking for a Holistic, Biological Dentist?

root canal healing

When I wrote the post about how to heal a cavity, I had no idea that the post would end up being circulated around dental forums where it became the target of ridicule and even anger from a number disbelieving dentists. The fact is that teeth can and do heal, even those in need of a root canal.

Whether or not conventional dentists choose to acknowledge it does not really matter. Holistic dentists know the truth! For example, Dr. Weston A. Price DDS documented many cases of cavities resolving when nutritional deficiencies were corrected in his book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration.

While I received many negative emails and comments from dentists (I also received a few positive emails from dentists, I might add), I was also delighted and amazed by stories from Moms just like me who had experiences very similar to my own…tooth problems resolving with nutrition or natural medicine alone!

One of the most interesting emails I received was from a homeopath named Kay, who lives in Australia, coincidentally right near where my husband was raised!  Kay wrote me the following story which I thought so fascinating that it absolutely needed to be a guest post:

Homeopathy Instead of a Root Canal

Dear Sarah,

My sister who lives in Hong Kong sent me the link to your site after you wrote an article about butter oil and how it reversed tooth decay when taken along with cod liver oil.

I am a homeopath and teach workshops to parents on how to use natural medicine to raise healthy children, so I was fascinated by this piece of information and it prompted me to share another tooth story with you and your readers about how my son was saved from a root canal at the age of 14 years old by using natural medicine.

Jack had been playing golf with his brother over the school holidays and while hot tired and emotional ( a normal state of affairs for my son at the time), his golf club got stuck in the bag.  So, with sheer brute force, he ripped it out of the bag straight into his mouth and broke off the bottom of his front tooth!

We went straight to the dentist who did tests and declared the root was dying and that he needed to do a root canal before the tooth discolored. I told him to remove his drill from my son’s mouth and said I would try and save the tooth with homeopathy. A not very happy dentist told me there was a time and place for homeopathy and this wasn’t it and if there was any remote chance I could save this tooth he would send me all his clients.

I took Jack home and gave him homeopathic Arnica for shock, trauma and bruising.  Then, I used homeopathic hypericum, a great remedy every parent should know about as it repairs nerve damage. I gave it to Jack every few hours and then reduced it to 2 x day for the next week. In America I believe you can buy homeopathics in health food stores quite easily, so always have arnica and hypericum in your cupboard for “teeth” accidents.

Today Jack still has his original front tooth with a little cosmetic dentistry to build up the bottom half and the dentist still has not sent me one client!

Thanks for letting me share this story Sarah. Just knowing these small pieces of information can create such better health outcomes for our children and families.

Looking for a Holistic, Biological Dentist?

From Sarah …. I get many requests about who I recommend as a truly holistic, biological dentist. If you are looking for one, I recommend Dr. Carlo Litano of Natural-Smiles.com – (727) 300-0044. He sees young children as well as adults. Be sure to tell Dr. Litano that The Healthy Home Economist sent you and get 10% off your first visit!

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Category: Natural Remedies, Oral Health
Kay Watts

Kay Watts is a classical Homeopath in Victoria, Australia who lectures at the Southern School of Naturopathy. She teaches workshops on how to provide first-aid using Homeopathic and natural medicines.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (343)

  1. Valerie Mints via Facebook

    Jun 23, 2011 at 6:47 pm

    @ Linda: Whoa.

    Reply
  2. Jessica Michelson via Facebook

    Jun 23, 2011 at 6:38 pm

    or a crown?

    Reply
  3. Lynn Griebahn

    Jun 23, 2011 at 5:54 pm

    what I find amusing is the reaction to this story. I do not have enough information about this case to determine if this tooth really needed a RCT (Root Canal Treatment). It is true that the dentin can repair and rebuild itself to an extent. It is true that the outter hard enamel shell also can remineralize and repair itself. It is NOT TRUE that a cavity completely trough the enamel can or will repair. If a cavity is just in the enamel it is called an incipient caries and it can repair if it is less than halfway through. The small cavities that break through the enamel are the worst because once the bacteria breaks through the hard enamel the bacteria are protected from the saliva and from the re-mineralization process and a filling is necessary. As far as this tooth not needing a RCT, call me in a couple of years when there is an infection in the bone. These teeth are usually asymmptomatic for a while then they hurt and swell. I see this all the time. If the nerve re-attaches then the tooth may be fine. We can now get the nerve to grow back in teeth that have had RCT. However, if you were foolish enough to not have a RCT and have a tooth extracted because you follow some silly suggestions on these boards then you are screwed. Remember that when you choose to extract an infected tooth that needs an RCT, you are compromising all your other teeth. This foolishness was suggested over 100 years ago. Dentist suggested that any infected or tooth with a cavity be extracted because it infects your whole body. How would you like dentures at 25? Ask your grandmother

    Reply
    • Sarah, TheHealthyHomeEconomist

      Jun 23, 2011 at 6:57 pm

      Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

    • AshleyRoz

      Jun 23, 2011 at 10:45 pm

      Hahahahaha. 🙂

    • jason and lisa

      Jun 24, 2011 at 10:53 am

      lol

    • marina

      Jun 24, 2011 at 10:57 am

      so why did my root canaled tooth broke off and now i need to extract it? my dentist said that the root canal was improperly done or something, and there is infection there now. she said the best way to get rid of the infection is too extract the tooth now, clean the root canal, and put it an artifical tooth.

    • tin

      Jan 25, 2012 at 3:21 pm

      I doubt this will get read by Lynn but what the heck. I had a molar pulled when I was 15yo. I’m 43yo and other than some shifting of teeth all is well.

  4. jason and lisa

    Jun 23, 2011 at 3:12 pm

    as always sarah, we’ve got your back!! so amazing the people who believe the answer to proper nutrition and good health is achieved through cans, pills, supplements, vaccinations and lets not forget the cholesterol and fat free diet!! were left with weird colorless drones filling our society whose only satisfaction comes from association with other weird colorless drones joining to point and laugh at the dietary errors of the healthy happy colorful people..it brings to my mind an old saying…how many people have to jump off of the cliff in front of you before you decide to step out of line?? keep up the fight, sarah!!

    -jason and lisa-

    Reply
  5. Linda Hafenbredl via Facebook

    Jun 23, 2011 at 3:10 pm

    “”Dr. Thomas Rau, who runs the Paracelsus Clinic (cancer clinic since 1958) in Switzerland recently checked the records of the last 150 breast cancer patients treated in his clinic. He found that 147 of them (98%) had one or more root canal teeth on the same meridian as the original breast cancer tumor. “

    Reply
  6. Linda Hafenbredl via Facebook

    Jun 23, 2011 at 3:09 pm

    About the connection between root canals and cancer: http://www.new-cancer-treatments.org/Articles/RootCanals.html

    Reply
  7. Erica Lynall Dixon via Facebook

    Jun 23, 2011 at 2:58 pm

    Ah ridicule & anger – the result of fear of the unknown… (IMHO). Anyone read The Tooth Truth (Jermone). Root canals are nasty.

    Reply
  8. Tamara

    Jun 23, 2011 at 2:23 pm

    Hasn’t anyone ever noticed how a toothache can come and go? Ever notice it’s related to your DIET? Since reading your original post, Sarah, it’s become so obvious to me; refuting it seems absolutely silly!

    Reply
  9. Rosana Costa Stoessel via Facebook

    Jun 23, 2011 at 2:06 pm

    I have had dentists tell me that small cavities will heal themselves, but the ones caught that are large won’t. your article was the first I’m hearing of this.

    Reply
  10. Meggan Wehmeyer via Facebook

    Jun 23, 2011 at 1:59 pm

    just fyi, a root canal for trauma is a very different situation from a root canal for an abscessed tooth. The traumatic injury is much more likely to heal on its own. It would be a mistake to see them as the same thing…

    Reply
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