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   AHA nixes antibiotics for dental and surgical procedures with some exceptions. (Heart Disorders board)

7th May 2007
Antibiotics are now the new pariah because doctor's overprescribing antiobiotics for VIRAL infections and meatr processors getting huge amounts of antibiotics into the food chain have caused an unnecessary outbreak of antibiotic resistant strains of deadly bacteria.

This new head in the sand approach that basically says "oh that's probably a viral infection" or "most people don;t get infections from dental work", with no good facts or expensive cultures to back up either old saw will invaribly kill people.

IF a dentist cuts into your gum he exposes your bloodstream to any pathogens that are in your mouth...if that pathogen lodges in your heart and grows it is deadly serious bacterial endocarditis or pericarditis that a few people actually on this board have reported getting.

I called my MD and asked for penicillin-K for a deep scaling of my dental roots...I have a stent. He said he didn't think I needed anything. I took it from my old stash. I finally fired my doctor.

It's noble of doctors to try to undo decades of their errors :rolleyes: but not at the cost of patients' health. I GUARANTEE that a doctor in the AHA with a bad heart facing gumwork WILL take an antibiotic for himself, probably amoxillin.

My experience with "probably viral": I suffered with an almost annually recurring pneumonia/bronchitis with a painful cough for about 8 weeks before dragging myself to my doctor and getting the AVERAGE diagnosis..."Usually this is viral"...no smear, no culture just a diagnosis by AVERAGE. Since I was spitting up green and black goom I KNEW it was more than "just a virus." I went home furious and a neighbor gave me a Z-pack (three high dose azithromycin meant for a 3 pill total course of antibiotics.)
I was CURED within 36 hours.


Yes, most people will NOT get bacterial endocarditis from dental work. Those that DO stand a good chance of dying. If there's BLOOD and the environment isn't sterile, there's risk...mouths aren't sterile.
I think the AHA is all wet on this "proclamation."
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