Carolus
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- Nov 11, 2020
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What material are the MSE screws made up of? Looks like steel.
We know that our bodies are able to conduct electrical currents, there's even water in our bones. If you put metal screws inside your maxilla, this would result in ion migration between the metals which has not uncontroversially been reported by some to have harmful effects(generally feelings of sickness/drowsiness), read up on amalgam/quicksilver cavity fillings if interested, and yeah yeah controversy this and that, my dad had amalgam put in when he was a teenager and he felt absolutely terrible, couldn't ever stay awake in class or focus at all(yes, he didn't feel like that beforehand). I've had my own experience with dentists/orthodontists and their so called ''educated'' work, a whole 3 years extra to learn ''tooth and jaw alignment'' and then skips off to work to leave us with a misaligned jaw, a crossbite and a recessed maxilla. So not much trust in their opinion there.
On a related note, the holes that are created from drilling in to the maxilla, do they actually close afterwards? I know theoretically they would, but does anyone have any experience with this? If there would be any residual particles of metal from the screws remaining when the holes close, they'd be there forever or maybe just migrate around your skull or god forbid in to your bloodstream/brain. Hopefully this isn't an occurrence.
TL;DR: What material are the screws? Do the holes close up once you remove the screws?
We know that our bodies are able to conduct electrical currents, there's even water in our bones. If you put metal screws inside your maxilla, this would result in ion migration between the metals which has not uncontroversially been reported by some to have harmful effects(generally feelings of sickness/drowsiness), read up on amalgam/quicksilver cavity fillings if interested, and yeah yeah controversy this and that, my dad had amalgam put in when he was a teenager and he felt absolutely terrible, couldn't ever stay awake in class or focus at all(yes, he didn't feel like that beforehand). I've had my own experience with dentists/orthodontists and their so called ''educated'' work, a whole 3 years extra to learn ''tooth and jaw alignment'' and then skips off to work to leave us with a misaligned jaw, a crossbite and a recessed maxilla. So not much trust in their opinion there.
On a related note, the holes that are created from drilling in to the maxilla, do they actually close afterwards? I know theoretically they would, but does anyone have any experience with this? If there would be any residual particles of metal from the screws remaining when the holes close, they'd be there forever or maybe just migrate around your skull or god forbid in to your bloodstream/brain. Hopefully this isn't an occurrence.
TL;DR: What material are the screws? Do the holes close up once you remove the screws?