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DESTROY DEPRESSION
BAD BREATH FREE FOREVER
TEETH WHITENING 4 YOU
CANDIDA CRUSHER
HEARTBURN & ACID REFLUX REMEDY REPORT
Your suggestion about the site
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Your suggestion about the site
You can write like you feel, do not hold back, I need to know what you think we should do
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That is a good idea.
Well one is a lawyer from NY who i made an interview with and was cured with laser and sinus operation by Dr. Krespi. He sounded really really real, and he must have bad breath for real.
And there are peopel apparently having success with triple antibiotic treatment.
I am so against medicines and using them but for once I would gave it a shot.
Probably I would create a new topic in the forum called cured where all the testimonies would go.
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Here's a start
1) Gender
2) Age
3) Known medical conditions
4) age when you first became aware of halitosis
5) major event in your life which triggered halitosis
6) symptoms
7) remedies tried
medical help sought
9) medical intervention received
10) date of cure
11) treatment contributing to cure
12) side effects of cure
13) diet before cure
14) diet after cure
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Thanks for all your work jimi
CB
If you don`t mind, I`d also like to suggest that we make an organized list of the e-mail addresses of doctors, medical institutions & pharmaceutical companies that could help us.This way the members would know who to send their letters to. We can bombard them e-mails demanding for better research & probably our numbers & persistence would convince them to take our condition more seriously.Thanks again.
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CyberchndriacNot wrote:Need to support you on this one Jimi. Ideally, we need a database where we can record data relating to the case studies we have. Validating the data and /or moderating the contributors is going to be tricky. But I suppose we're not conducting a scientific experiment here and just trying to collate and report people's experiences. It would provide starting material for further investigation so I think well worth it. Should we make a list of data we need to have reported?
Here's a start
1) Gender
2) Age
3) Known medical conditions
4) age when you first became aware of halitosis
5) major event in your life which triggered halitosis
6) symptoms
7) remedies tried
medical help sought
9) medical intervention received
10) date of cure
11) treatment contributing to cure
12) side effects of cure
13) diet before cure
14) diet after cure
Hi Jimi, thanks again for this site. I think you guys are on to something.
If we record personal data about ourselves maybe we can figure out why we suffer from bb and others don't? Or why some of us have chronic bb and others have occasional bb?
I belive if we can figure out what we have in common; we can possible find the cure.
Possible questions?
-when and why do you think you developed bb?
-chronic bb? Occasional bb?
-blood type
-surgeries
-current/previous medical and or dental conditions
-diagnosis
-Medications taken
-allergies
-sinus conditions
-diets, when, how long, what types,
-diet supplements
-gas/constipation
Sorry CyberchndriacNot, some questions may be simular to yours. I'm too tired to revise my posting. However, thats all I can come up with for now.
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About Bad Breath (Halitosis)
Considerations:
Some disorders will produce specific, characteristic odors to the breath.
A fruity odor to the breath occurs as the body attempts to get rid of excess acetone through the breathing. This is a characteristic sign of ketoacidosis , which may occur in diabetes, and is a potentially life-threatening condition.
A fecal odor to the breath (the breath smells like feces) can occur with prolonged vomiting , especially when there is a bowel obstruction . It may also occur temporarily if a person has a nasogastric tube (a tube placed through the nose or mouth to the stomach to drain the stomach contents) in place.
The breath may have an ammonia-like odor (also described as urine-like or "fishy") in people with chronic kidney failure .
Common Causes:
If previously normal breath turns into halitosis, causes could include:
Food or beverages consumed (such as cabbage, garlic, raw onions, or coffee)
Vitamin supplements (especially in large doses)
Poor dental hygiene
Dentures
Cavities
Tobacco smoking
Alcoholism
Throat infection
Sinusitis
Lung infection
Gum disease ( gingivitis , gingivostomatitis )
Abscessed tooth
Impacted tooth
Foreign body in the nose (usually in children)
Often (but not always) there is a white, yellowish, or bloody discharge from one nostril
Drugs
Paraldehyde
Triamterene and inhaled anesthetics
Insulin - injection
Diseases that may be associated with breath odor (not presented in order of likelihood -- some are extremely unlikely):
Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis
Acute necrotizing ulcerative mucositis
Acute renal failure
Bowel obstruction (can cause breath to smell like feces)
Bronchiectasis
Chronic renal failure (can cause breath to smell like ammonia )
Diabetes (fruity or sweet chemical smell with ketoacidosis)
Esophageal cancer
Gastric carcinoma
Gastrojejunocolic fistula (fruity-smelling breath)
Hepatic encephalopathy
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Lung abscess
Ozena , or atrophic rhinitis
Periodontal disease
Pharyngitis
Zenker's diverticulum
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