It is estimated that over 95 % of cases of orofacial pain result from dental causes ( i . e . toothache caused by pulpitis or a dental abscess ).
12.
A dental abscess is a type of odontogenic infection, although commonly the latter term is applied to an infection which has spread outside the local region around the causative tooth.
13.
:: : : Moreover various medical journals of Price's time talk more about dental abscesses in regards to FIT then they talk about endodontic treated or pulpless teeth.
14.
""'Eggerthia catenaformis " "'is a bacterium from the genus of Eggerthia which has been isolated from a dental abscess from a human.
15.
In desperate efforts to alleviate pain, some patients undergo multiple ( but unneeded ) root canals or extractions, even in the absence of suggestive X-ray evidence of dental abscess.
16.
"The experience of pain, endurance or dental abscesses, problems with eating, chewing and missing, discolored or damaged teeth, has a major impact on people's daily lives and well being ."
17.
The bone is rough and leathery, with strange marks of wrinkles and depressions, this may be a consequence of the conditions of preservation, but the descriptors suggest that indicate a disease, possibly caused by dental abscesses.
18.
A four base pair deletion in exon 3 is also noted in patients with TDO; deletion in two attrition of tooth enamel, no spacing between teeth, no soft tissue mass or sign of dental abscess, and a bite relationship where the mandibular ( bottom ) teeth interdigitate within a normal plane of 1-2mm behind and underneath the maxillary ( top ) teeth.
19.
:: : : Here we see Price himself talking about " dental abscess " in the very book used as reference to FIT and a 2004 book by Wolters Kluwer Health that talks about " dental abscess " being one of the potential " focal infections " for brain abscessed or meningitis and yet we are being told by Yobol that they are somehow two different theories?
20.
:: : : Here we see Price himself talking about " dental abscess " in the very book used as reference to FIT and a 2004 book by Wolters Kluwer Health that talks about " dental abscess " being one of the potential " focal infections " for brain abscessed or meningitis and yet we are being told by Yobol that they are somehow two different theories?