pellicle;n860846 said:Hi
Please give me the microbiological overview of how *** introduces large numbers of pathogenic bacertia into your blood stream? My question indicates "I really can't see how" as my position. Unless your version of *** is quite different to mine.
Dentists visits and poor oral hygiene on the other hand are likely culprits.
Hmm, on reflection perhaps vigorous anal intercourse with lots of bleeding may do it. But that falls into the "differs" category for me. ;-)
pellicle;n860848 said:Hi
All epithelium is specifically designed as a barrier, a barrier to living things getting "inside" which no multicellular organism wants.
So even your gums do not really "transfer" bacteria, but its the points of physical damage that allow direct access to the blood stream which do. If you have "sensitive" inflamed gums its most likely down to infections working away on the surface. Its when there is damage to the (thus thin) surface and exposes the blood vessels (you may not even observe bleeding) that gives infections a chance to get in.
honeybunny;n861025 said:One of the best investments I made for dental care was an in-shower water pik similar to this one, http://www.amazon.com/ShowerBreeze-...TF8&qid=1450113927&sr=1-20&keywords=water+pik. It's so convenient to use when I'm showering, much easier than a stand alone unit that you need to refill each time you use it. I just toggle the valve and I'm good to go. Using this greatly improved my periodontal disease, reducing some pockets from 4s to 1s.
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