Oral Infection, Systemic Disease
In this video, Christopher Hussar spends about 26 minutes speaking on "Oral Infection, Systemic Disease" at the 32nd Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
About Christopher Hussar
CHRISTOPHER HUSSAR, D.D.S., D.O. received his D.D.S. Degree from University of Detroit Dental College, Michigan in 1978 and his D.O. Degree from Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine, East Lansing, Michigan in 1986.
With 2 professional Degrees Dr. Hussar occupies a unique niche in Medicine. Although no longer practicing Dentistry, most of his practice involves patients who are having health problems related to chronic oral infections. For 30 years his practice has focused around the treatment of chronic pain disorders, in particular facial pain and somatic pain that arises as a result of focal oral disease. The majority of his practice consists of performing oral surgical procedures designed to eliminate diseased bone and teeth from the jaws.
His interests in chronic illness have lead him down additional pathways of diagnosing and treating such newer epidemic diseases as Lyme Disease and its associated co-infections.
He possesses strong beliefs that most of mankind’s degenerative diseases result in part or totally from chronic infections residing in our bodies.
Dr. Hussar may be contacted through the Century Wellness Center located in Reno, Nevada by phone 775-827-0707.
Transcription
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I've been given a great honor today to introduce to you a pioneer, a genius, someone that many of you are very familiar with. The person who is an expert in the dental area. An extraordinary physician. Someone who has saved more lives than you can imagine, including my own. With great honor, I would like to present to you Dr. Christopher Husser. Thank you.
Thank you. Most unexpected. Thank you. I'm Chris Huster, I'm a physician and dentist, I live in Reno, Nevada, where the men are men and sheep are nervous. I think the Cancer Control Society for allowing me to lecture today. I think Frank in the rain for the work they've done and just looking around and talking to people who have cancer. I feel like medicine owes you an apology for letting you down, for allowing you to get your disease process. And that comes from the bottom of my heart and medicine needs to work harder and smarter to figure out how to cure this awful disease. I'm going to give you some hints. Today is not the bottom line here, but some interesting facts about how the mouth affects the rest of the body. I don't want to talk about mercury. That's a dead horse. We know Mercury should not be introduced into any body cavity by either by needle filling or anything like that. The bottom line to my lecture I'm going to get the conclusion right now is mercury is bad. All root canals are dead teeth. They're infected. The dental profession knew that one hundred years ago. And I'm going to try to focus on what I've been doing it for 15 years is chronic jaw bone infections. Those are called cavitation is not dental decay, but in reality, bone decay. You saw the title of my presentation was going to be How the Mouth Affects Systemic Disease. But in reality, this is Confessions of a Dental Heretic.
So we're concerned about any oral infection. And the literature, the medical literature, at least, is replete with numerous articles in the last 10 years showing how the mouth and dental infections caused systemic disease. Most of the critters in the mouth and there are 400 different pathogens in the oral cavity. Times 10 to the tenth are anaerobic organisms.
But in my own research, I pulled out Candida, Pseudomonas, bacillus, fragile peace, Cox Seki virus, herpes viruses, parasites from these chronic jawbone and cavities, including root canals. These infections also cause lymphadenopathy, abscesses, tonsils or abscesses, retinal pharyngeal abscesses, chronic sinusitis, ear problems, periodontal abscesses and even pneumonia, lung abscesses and pain in a room with