POOP Odor from MOUTH....What causes it? | |
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Tali User ID: 1018633 United States 08/11/2010 01:52 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | He could have a bad case of gingivitis....my ex had it and he had to have a deep cleaning done where they deep clean quadrents of the jaw and get wayyyy wayyy back underneath the gums and along the tooth clean stuff out. Before he had that done...it didnt matter how many times he brushed his teeth, the smell was always there. Our perfect companions never have fewer than four feet. ~Colette |
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Do You Want To Know MORE User ID: 1117937 Australia 10/03/2010 06:09 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Its gross if people talk to me and their breath smells of shit I tell them to fuck off your breath stink of shit Quoting: Anonymous Coward 1059775i am in fits of laughter ,can hardly type this ,i havent had a good laugh for ages, some of the responses are classic, sorry op. |
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Frigg Stuyvesant User ID: 1108799 United States 10/03/2010 06:35 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Bad Breath is the waste product from thousands of bacteria that inhabit our mouths. To date over 800 species of bacteria are believed to live in the oral cavity but we have not come close to identifying most of them. All our mouth bacteria serve a purpose, some are used to aid digestion, some bacteria help defend the mouth against illness. In a bad breath scenario, a certain type of bacteria that feed off proteins and are anaerobic in nature release waste products called "Volatile Sulphur Compounds" into the mouth as they go about their lives. This usually happens because the environment of your mouth has been somehow changed so that it enhances the support of these smell making bacteria over and above the good neutral bacteria. Quoting: domesticangelSome of the most common bacteria that release bad breath smells are Treponema denticola, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Prevotella intermedia, Tannerella forsythensis, Porphyromonas endodontalis and Eubacterium Species. As mentioned before, these particular bacteria digest proteins and make amino acids and a waste product called Volatile Sulphur Compounds. There are three main Volatile Sulphur compounds; Hydrogen Sulphide, Methyl Mercaptan, and Hydrogen Disulphide. These three compounds will make up 90% of all bad breath smells. Each compound comes from bacteria that reside in different parts of the oral cavity. For example if you are high in Hydrogen Sulphide (rotten eggs) then usually this is from bacteria on the tongue surface. If you are high in Methyl Mercaptan (bowel and fecal smells) then usually this is from bacteria living between your teeth and under your gums. It is a common smell of gingivitis and periodontitis. Finally if you are high in Dimethyl Sulphide (cabbage eggs or gasoline smells) then this is from the tongue surface or ketosis from the lungs. As well as these main sulphur compounds other smelly compounds are also released. Below is a table that shows the different smells made by the bacteria in your mouth. In a healthy oral cavity, these bacteria will be in good balance with the remaining bacteria of the mouth and therefore not cause problems. The Dr Speiser's Australian Breath Clinic Recovery Program aims at helping you create a healthy mouth environment so that there is always good bacterial balance. We do this by first using a special Balancing Rinse with a proprietary ingredient for five intense days. This is followed by our proven KForce Breath Guard Probiotic Program that uses a (good bacteria) called Streptococcus salivarius K12, the main ingredient in KForce Probiotics. Mouth Compound The Smell Made Methyl Mercaptan (CH3SH) feces Hydrogen Sulphide (H2S) rotten eggs Dimethyl Sulphide (CH3SCH3) cabbage, sulphur, gasoline Skatole(3-methyl-1H-indole) mothball, faeces Cadaverine C5H14N2 corpses, urine Putrescine(NH2(CHH2)4NH2) decaying flesh Isovaleric acid sweat, rancid-cheese, off-milk Very informative...Thanks! Cui Bono? |
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SpaceCommand User ID: 1009022 United States 10/03/2010 06:52 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Actually, alot of it, regardless of dental hygiene, has to do with what they eat. If they eat a lot of meat and egg and milk products, wheat, and starchy foods, their breath will smell like shit/rotten. If they eat mostly raw plant foods then they shouldnt have any breath or body odour really whatsoever. Quoting: guest 1064671Probiotics will solve the problem. There is too much bad bacteria in the gut, which surfaces in a double acid reflux. Both the opening to the intestine, and the neck of the esophagus leading into the stomach are likely culprits. Last Edited by SpaceCommand on 10/03/2010 06:55 AM "With an eye made quiet by the power of harmony and the deep power of joy, we see into the life of things." William Wordsworth And yet the same revolutionary beliefs for which our forebears fought are still at issue around the globe—the belief that the rights of man come not from the generosity of the state, but from the hand of God. John F. Kennedy Inaugural Address Lincoln's economic advisor Henry C. Carey explained the universal issue in his 1851 Harmony of Interests: "Two systems are before the world.... One looks to pauperism, ignorance, depopulation, and barbarism; the other to increasing wealth, comfort, intelligence, combination of action, and civilization. One looks towards universal war; the other towards universal peace. One is the English system; the other ... the American system, for ... elevating while equalizing the condition of man throughout the world." "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." - Albert Einstein |
abeland1 The Art of making Colloidal Silver User ID: 81679411 United States 06/27/2022 10:20 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Your mouth hosts more than 1000 species of bacteria, in a stable community where potential bad actors are kept in check by peaceful bacteria around them. Elsewhere in the body, including on the skin or the lining of the gut, communities of bacteria live on a continuous sheet of cells, where the outermost layer is constantly shed, getting rid of invasive bacteria. But your teeth can't cast off a layer like that, says Tonetti. There, the bacteria live on a hard surface, which pierces through the protective outer sheet of cells. When the plaque the bacteria on your teeth live in builds up enough to harden and spread under the gum, it triggers inflammation: immune cells flood in and destroy both microbes and our own infected cells (see Diagram). If this goes on too long, an oxygen-poor pocket develops between gum and tooth. A handful of bacteria take advantage of this and multiply. One of them, Porphyromonas gingivalis, is especially insidious, disrupting the stable bacterial community and prolonging inflammation. https://imgur.com/a/1QVqKnx This might seem a strange thing to do. Most pathogens try to block or avoid inflammation, which normally kills them before it shuts down again. Starting in our 30s and 40s, this shutdown begins failing, leading to the chronic inflammation involved in diseases of ageing. No one knows why. P. gingivalis may have a hand in it. It actually perpetuates inflammation by producing molecules that block some inflammatory processes, but not all of them, says Caroline Genco of Tufts University in Massachusetts. The resulting weakened inflammation never quite destroys the bacteria, but keeps trying, killing your own cells in the process. The debris is a feast for P. gingivalis, which, unlike most bacteria, needs to eat protein. Left that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that The destruction also liberates the iron that bacteria need and which the body therefore normally keeps locked up. "These bacteria manipulate their interaction with the host immune response to enhance their own survival," says George Hajishengallis at the University of Pennsylvania. [link to theartofmakingcolloidalsilver.com (secure)] A friend went through this and this is what he did: He took colloidal silver in and washed his mouth with it, swished it, and saw the inflammation go down. Again, he saw pus trying to come out. When it did, he just pressed his inflamed gum. He pushed it to force the pus out when it was ready to come out, until blood had a chance to run and white blood cells could start working on the infection. Then he swished and rinsed with colloidal silver until no more blood came out. He continued to use colloidal silver until his mouth was normal, only about 12 hours later. The worst culprits, which seem to play a role in the widest range of ailments, are the bacteria that cause gum disease. This is the most widespread disease of ageing - in fact, "the most prevalent disease of mankind", says Maurizio Tonetti at that that that the University of Hong Kong. In the US, 42 per cent of those aged 30 or above have gum disease, but that rises to 60 per cent in those 65 and older. It has been measured at 88 per cent in Germany. Strikingly, many of the afflictions of ageing - from rheumatoid arthritis to Parkinson's - are more likely, more severe, or both, in people with gum disease. It is possible that some third thing goes wrong, leading to both gum disease and the other maladies. But there is increasing evidence that the relationship is direct: the bacteria behind gum disease help cause the others. Circumstantial evidence is certainly damning. In the US, states that put federal Medicaid funds towards people's dental costs, including those related to preventing or treating gum disease, ultimately pay between 31 and 67 per cent less than states that don't, to help those people later with heart attacks, diabetes, strokes and cancer. Private insurance companies report similar patterns, says David Ojcius at the University of the Pacific in San Francisco. But how can the bacteria that cause gum disease play a role in all these conditions? To answer that, we have to look at how they turn the immune system against us. Your mouth hosts more than 1000 species of bacteria, in a stable community where potential bad actors are kept in check by peaceful bacteria around them. Elsewhere in the body, including on the skin or the lining of the gut, communities of bacteria live on a continuous sheet of cells, where the outermost layer is constantly shed, getting rid of invasive bacteria. But your teeth can't cast off a layer like that, says Tonetti. There, the bacteria live on a hard surface, which pierces through the protective outer sheet of cells. When the plaque the bacteria on your teeth live in builds up enough to harden and spread under the gum, it triggers inflammation: immune cells flood in and destroy both microbes and our own infected cells (see Diagram). If this goes on too long, an oxygen-poor pocket develops between gum and tooth. A handful of bacteria take advantage of this and multiply. One of them, Porphyromonas gingivalis, is especially insidious, disrupting the stable bacterial community and prolonging inflammation. This might seem a strange thing to do. Most pathogens try to block or avoid inflammation, which normally kills them before it shuts down again. Starting in our 30s and 40s, this shutdown begins failing, leading to the chronic inflammation involved in diseases of ageing. No one knows why. P. gingivalis may have a hand in it. It actually perpetuates inflammation by producing molecules that block some inflammatory processes, but not all of them, says Caroline Genco of Tufts University in Massachusetts. The resulting weakened inflammation never quite destroys the bacteria, but keeps trying, killing your own cells in the process. The debris is a feast for P. gingivalis, which, unlike most bacteria, needs to eat protein. Left that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that The destruction also liberates the iron that bacteria need and which the body therefore normally keeps locked up. "These bacteria manipulate their interaction with the host immune response to enhance their own survival," says George Hajishengallis at the University of Pennsylvania. [link to www.researchgate.net (secure)] Last Edited by abeland1 on 11/22/2022 11:08 AM |
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PINKORCHID88-Cleanhouse User ID: 83506835 Australia 06/27/2022 10:44 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Wasn't there a thread on here about the vaxxed breath smelling like that? Warning proceeding to read this may cause anxiety, poster is indemnified if you proceed. I can't give you the ultimate truth ,it's all a matter of perspective and spin. So I empower you with the gift of discernment. SEE THE TRUTH , KNOW THE TRUTH, FEEL THE TRUTH |
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