Lynelle Deroo

Is Your Toothbrush Killing You? 5 Keys to Oral Health and Your Longevity

January 12, 202519 min read
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Summary

Today's Valuable Resources/Link:

https://brushforlife.com/

In this episode, I introduce you to Lynelle DeRoo, RDH,

She is the founder of Brush For Life, Inc, and BFL INTERNATIONAL, a 501(c)3 organization. A dental health professional since the age of 14, Lynelle is passionate that others learn the best practices for Oral Health and Overall Longevity.

Her trademarked SMILE System for Brushing® provides a methodical and systematic approach to oral care. Its time Dental and Medical care was approached—and taught—together, to provide optimum health outcomes for young and old.

Today she speaks about:

Importance of Oral Health (2:49)

Impact of Tooth Loss on Health and Longevity (5:32)

Connection Between Oral Health and Systemic Diseases (8:34)

Bacterial Load and Its Effects on Health (13:28)

The Smile System Brushing Technique (18:47)

Join me for this episode of Mommy Heal Thyself to learn more about oral health and ways to optimize your oral hygiene for longevity.

Transcript
(Note, this was transcribed using a transcription software and may not reflect the exact words used in the podcast)

Intro  0:00 

Welcome to Mommy Heal Thyself.  We featured guests that provide you with the tools, resources and strategies you need to say no to a life of pain and suffering all forms of preventable disease, toxic drugs and unnecessary surgeries. We hope to inspire you to boldly reclaim your ability to heal, and to serve ones to love.

Speaker 1 0:20

Welcome everyone to another episode of mommy heal thyself. Today. I have with us Lynelle deroux, who is a registered dental hygienist. She's the founder of brush for life, Incorporated and BFL International, a, 501, c3, organization, a dental health professional since the age of 14. I mean, this is so amazing. Lynelle is passionate that others learn the best practices for oral health and overall longevity. Her trademark smile system is brushing provides a methodical and systemic approach to oral care. It's time that dental and medical care was approached and taught together to provide optimum health outcomes for young and old. And as we always say, Guess what? I'm going to let you in on a secret. Your mouth is a part of your body. Ah, who would have thunk? You would never think that, thinking about our insurance paradigm, which says, Oh, you have to have dental insurance over here, and I care insurance over here, and, oh yeah, everything else is over here, which is crazy. So today, she's going to tell us about the question, Is your toothbrush killing you? Five Keys to oral health and your longevity. Welcome winel, thank you

Speaker 2 2:38

very much. Thank you. So let's get right into it. Yes. How deadly is your toothbrush? Is

Unknown Speaker 2:46

your teeth? Brush? Everyone brushes.

Speaker 2 2:49

And basically, who cares about your teeth? People tend to take them for granted. It's a boring topic. I get

Unknown Speaker 2:56

that it is until you don't have

Speaker 2 3:01

just a few and then besides that, there's a dangerous concern. So we all want to avoid that. There are two Paramount concerns among Americans in Europe. In fact, I've had several Europeans when I traveled Europe, tell me we can pick out Americans like that. Yeah, we know who you are because of your team. We tend to have white and straight typically, and so that tends to identify us as Americans, because we care about the white straight and we also care about our breath. So those are, those are the true Paramount things. Breath white. I used to do a little search for doing ad AdWords, searches for Facebook, and those were the things that people search for the most people don't search for how to brush that from childhood. However, I've been at hygienist for 40 years,

Unknown Speaker 4:12

and I don't because if they did,

Unknown Speaker 4:17

75 to 80% of Americans

Unknown Speaker 4:21

wouldn't have embassies go

Unknown Speaker 4:25

wouldn't have but

Speaker 2 4:26

they do. Clearly, people don't know what they're doing. Otherwise they wouldn't have that rate of So what do we need our team for? Well, of course, eating. We also need them for digestion, which means there's more surface area, surface area, and that's

Unknown Speaker 4:50

how your stomach and your

Speaker 2 4:53

digestive extracts nutrients. And you know, just just a little point with that

Speaker 1 5:00

Linnell, because a lot of times I hear people talk about they see little bits of food in their stool, and then they get all crazy about digestive enzymes, and maybe I just shouldn't eat any vegetables. I'm like, No, it's telling you you need to chew. So thank you for stressing that you

Unknown Speaker 5:20

we do not have teeth in our stomach. People

Speaker 2 5:23

misunderstand the digestive process of the stomach. It doesn't continue to actually dissolve or break down the food particles, not at all going to pull them out of

Unknown Speaker 5:39

the surface area. So the more

Speaker 2 5:46

thoroughly you treat your food, the more thoroughly saliva, which begins the digestion, is then met and assisted in the stomach,

Unknown Speaker 5:56

very important people

Speaker 2 6:00

who have all their teeth live 10 years longer than people who have no teeth,

Unknown Speaker 6:08

because the more. Because when you have

Speaker 2 6:12

teeth, people that don't have teeth are not doing that, and it reduces the amount of nutrition that they get. They die from malnutrition. Wow. Malnutrition, wow, eating, digestion, the nutrition and health and longevity, which I just mentioned. Speaking, I have a friend who's got upper adventure, and he calls out his teeth. I cannot understand

Unknown Speaker 6:55

whistling if you want to whistle for whatever

Unknown Speaker 6:59

reason, singing also having just

Unknown Speaker 7:05

like speaking, and then, of

Speaker 2 7:11

course, non verbal when you smile, that's an invitation. And if you don't have teeth, you know, it has such a huge impact also on

Speaker 1 7:23

people's self esteem and whether or not they become depressed. I remember my son, he was in an accident, and his two front teeth were knocked out, and he would just never, he would never smile. And then we finally got him the implants, and all he does now is smile, and you can just see that he just seems like he's a spirit has been lifted. You know, it's just amazing, the power of a smile. There was one other

Unknown Speaker 7:55

thing that's

Speaker 2 8:01

important, yeah, so you were talking about the

Speaker 1 8:04

way in which we smile, sorry, the teeth. How it affects a lot of other things besides digestion. It affects the way in which we are being seen, the way in which we show up for the world and things of that nature. Yes. So people who don't

Unknown Speaker 8:21

have teeth, are perceived to have

Unknown Speaker 8:25

a lower

Unknown Speaker 8:30

IQ, even if that's not

Speaker 2 8:34

the case. So besides the appearance and the concern of malpractice,

Unknown Speaker 8:40

the necessity for speaking the mouth

Unknown Speaker 8:44

plays an important role

Speaker 2 8:48

in our overall health. Introduction gut disease, believe it or not, can be deadly. I had these

Unknown Speaker 8:55

new postcards made for my business,

Unknown Speaker 8:59

and I had often taken care of my mom.

Speaker 2 9:03

She was in a hospital type bed. She was very good with her balance. So I had brought in my new cards. They were four by six, and I put one off her table stand next to her bed, and I was on the opposite side of the bedroom just then they bust. And she's a very public Christian character of personality, and she points to the cards, the only thing on the table beside the lamp. And she said, What's that? And she said, Well, what's it about? And I said, What's about the mountain body connection, she got

Unknown Speaker 9:46

very serious

Unknown Speaker 9:53

connection,

Speaker 2 9:57

sepsis, infection of the Blood, and the doctors couldn't figure out where this infection was coming from. She was getting sicker and sicker and sicker. When they finally determined that this infection in her blood was coming from her mouth, it was too late.

Unknown Speaker 10:16

She died

Speaker 3 10:21

two days later. There is not just a direct correlation between disease and

Speaker 2 10:27

diabetes various causes. So there's a difference between correlation. There are 57 diseases associated with five of those are known to the causes. That is heart attacks, stroke, diabetes, low term, low birth weight. Wow. These are very well documented. They're very well studied, lots of researchers, the other 52 not as much research has been funded. So to say it's positive doesn't necessarily mean that it I'm sorry that it's correlated doesn't necessarily mean that

Unknown Speaker 11:11

it's not positive. There are at least eight cancers

Unknown Speaker 11:14

associated with blood, lung, kidney,

Unknown Speaker 11:22

pancreatic, all

Speaker 2 11:27

and breast cancer, even I have made the post practices, so some of them are I have for

Unknown Speaker 11:51

hygienists and professionals on my website,

Unknown Speaker 11:58

I have a professionals chat.

Unknown Speaker 12:08

Team. Oh, that is so super awesome.

Speaker 1 12:09

And we're going to put the link in the show notes, lady, so don't worry about it. Yes. So on here. We've got

Unknown Speaker 12:21

lung cancer. I have all the breast,

Speaker 2 12:26

pancreatic cancer. That's very judgmental. Wow, yeah, yeah, metabolic, really, yes, and

Unknown Speaker 12:34

infertility in men and women who really good studies

Speaker 2 12:39

have been done. Really good studies have been done. Good meaning interesting. Were two very interesting studies. One showed they took the data they did like an analysis of data that they collected for other reasons, from a hospital that was born in fertility, and they looked at hair and determined that

Unknown Speaker 13:06

men that had gum disease and then

Speaker 2 13:12

later had it, they noticed that their sperm count went way

Speaker 2 13:21

up. Who would have thunk right? Let me ask you something. Did you ever like fight your tongue and it's bleeding? Or somehow you cut your mouth and it's bleeding? Have you noticed that it doesn't that's true. It self heals very quickly. That's

Unknown Speaker 13:37

because the bacteria in your

Speaker 2 13:42

mouth have a very high clotting factor so those bacteria get into your

Unknown Speaker 13:54

bloodstream. Ah, you know, I didn't

Speaker 2 13:56

think about that. These bacteria have a

Unknown Speaker 14:02

something that they give off that makes the

Unknown Speaker 14:06

blood vessel walls permeable,

Speaker 2 14:09

and they'll dive on right through the wall. I have a standing electron microscope of a bacterial going a cell going right through the wall of a blood vessel. Whoa, so like, like a submarine, they'll dive through and they get into your bloodstream, even if you don't have broken blood vessels, and they get into your bloodstream and they cause these little micro clots, and that's why it has lots

Unknown Speaker 14:41

and lots of little,

Unknown Speaker 14:48

tiny blood supply. Interesting. It's just logical, yeah, bacterial load in the

Unknown Speaker 14:59

mouth. Wow. And, you know, it also makes sense from the

Speaker 1 15:02

standpoint of the immune system. If you're battling with some kind of virus or bacteria, your body is not going to prioritize procreation. It's going to be like, No, we've got other things to deal with. Exactly It creates this low

Unknown Speaker 15:18

grade infection,

Unknown Speaker 15:22

immune response, and it's very

Speaker 2 15:32

detrimental to the health bacteria. Em out will divide every 10 to 20 minutes, one cell becomes two and in 24 hours time, that one cell will have split, and those split, so you have at least 5000 so that's why it's so important to brush

Unknown Speaker 15:53

more than once a day. Then yes, because 40% almost

Unknown Speaker 15:59

half of your

Unknown Speaker 16:02

tooth cell, between the teeth

Unknown Speaker 16:04

really are shaped like rectangles.

Speaker 2 16:08

And your front teeth, although they look like my hands, you know, they get narrow. If you were to turn that tooth sideways, it's shaped like this. So it's wedge shaped. In fact, the TUM sided lower my teeth are kind of Yeah, yeah, and

Unknown Speaker 16:27

but it's still red, red shaped, big triangle on both sides of

Unknown Speaker 16:37

the tube. That's why there's

Speaker 2 16:42

almost no reach. Now I do have a brushing system, systematic protein that helps

Unknown Speaker 16:48

improve that it's not going to replace, Okay, finish with the bacterial

Speaker 2 16:58

division. So you have 5000 cells. They live about 10 hours, then they die. Cell wall is still intact. Even though the inside is not living, it doesn't go anywhere. It's still stuck to the tube. Just death in five days, if that bacterial cell is not removed by friction, a irrigator. Then the cell wall would begin to pick up minerals from the saliva, and it turns hard, like particle. So the soft plaque, the soft bacteria, is referred to as plaque, bacteria that has started to solidify and change from organic to inorganic substance of the truth is harder. Okay, it's referred to it fails back to the days when they had wine barrels.

Unknown Speaker 18:00

There's a white, crusty

Unknown Speaker 18:03

cinnamon that will form inside

Unknown Speaker 18:09

the wine girl.

Speaker 2 18:13

The actual term for the bacterial cells that are calculus alkali means rock and black. Yeah.

Unknown Speaker 18:24

So we have this rock like substance. It doesn't brush

Speaker 2 18:26

off. We need to have a professional tartar is always like bacteria. So you need to have your teeth periodically if you've

Unknown Speaker 18:35

ever had gum disease,

Unknown Speaker 18:38

which I want to,

Speaker 2 18:43

because it's really important. I need to go over a little of that, because when I commit

Unknown Speaker 18:52

and talk about how to brush and prevent these problems,

Unknown Speaker 18:59

having a knowledge of the anatomy is

Speaker 2 19:04

going to be really helpful to Create motivations exactly

Unknown Speaker 19:11

logically people

Unknown Speaker 19:21

tend to think interesting.

Unknown Speaker 19:24

Where two teeth are side by side,

Unknown Speaker 19:32

because

Unknown Speaker 19:34

your teeth is round, like a golf

Unknown Speaker 19:38

ball. Site, great.

Speaker 2 19:45

So this low area between the inside lab and outside is where it's really important to

Unknown Speaker 19:53

use your best. It's very important to use in a certain

Speaker 2 19:59

way. People don't way. It's either

Unknown Speaker 20:05

the process, how they're doing it, or the product.

Unknown Speaker 20:13

So we want to

Unknown Speaker 20:17

make sure that

Unknown Speaker 20:19

you clean underneath the gums, and if your

Speaker 2 20:26

toothbrush, Mm, hmm, yeah, we want to know about this toothbrush being deadly directly

Unknown Speaker 20:37

on the outside. Uh

Speaker 3 20:42

huh. Mm, actors. They don't know what. Don't imitate them all right, let's get the pro advice,

Unknown Speaker 20:57

okay, yeah, what you want

Speaker 2 21:00

to do is angle the brush so that it slides down into that turtleneck, keep it there so it does a good job brushing for them, you don't want to actually brush the teeth. You actually want to,

Unknown Speaker 21:20

want to place the bristles against and then

Unknown Speaker 21:25

just agitate it exactly,

Unknown Speaker 21:26

some people

Unknown Speaker 21:31

say like massaging,

Unknown Speaker 21:35

wiggle, yeah, five to 10 seconds, two teeth

Speaker 2 21:42

at two. So I want to go over the smile system

Unknown Speaker 21:52

progression.

Speaker 2 21:53

I actually have a little mirror to tell so this Oh, great for kids. Yes, instructions,

Unknown Speaker 22:02

right there. So

Speaker 2 22:07

we're going to talk about the smile system s For start, don't understand that when they first put the toothbrush in their mouth, that big wad of toothpaste is going to be more abrasive because it's more concentrated. Have you ever sprinkled cleanser? Likely jazz and when you start rubbing the area where it was sprinkled. So the same thing will happen with this toothpick if you put it on your teeth where there's not much plaque, they will take off your enamel over time. In another state, I'm in California, and this guy his wife,

Unknown Speaker 22:57

have now no enamel on his French

Unknown Speaker 23:02

teeth. French en,

Unknown Speaker 23:09

translucent white glass.

Unknown Speaker 23:13

The rest of the tube, the whole coast of the

Unknown Speaker 23:17

tube, is made of dental dentin. Is a

Speaker 2 23:21

yellow color you white glass becomes, so you put a yellow light bulb behind white glass, What color does? The glass appears yellow. So the thinner that

Unknown Speaker 23:37

enamel gets,

Speaker 2 23:42

the more yellow. Wow. So all of those teeth whitening things are

Unknown Speaker 23:50

really doing more harm than smokers.

Unknown Speaker 23:59

Those will cause

Unknown Speaker 24:02

Morgan, okay. Using like the whitening strips, those do work, and the thicker your

Unknown Speaker 24:13

enamel is, more white. But what if the

Unknown Speaker 24:15

the yellowness is because you've

Speaker 1 24:17

worn down the enamel and so now you're having the dentin come through, and that's what makes your teeth look yellow, plastic,

Unknown Speaker 24:30

Like composite restorations, which

Unknown Speaker 24:37

is more portable,

Unknown Speaker 24:41

and I recommend for patients that

Speaker 2 24:44

are so hard right there that people tend to start either on the front or on the left side.

Speaker 2 24:55

So I find there's almost never done disease, almost never on the front or on the left side, right at the gum line, where this is not on the side of the tooth cut out area, so you Don't want to scrub your teeth up to the upstairs.

Unknown Speaker 25:20

This is up to the upstairs only density

Speaker 2 25:24

before you can start to put that toothpaste. Good work for you. Here's why. You have two places in your mouth, three, three places in your mouth where the saliva comes in. Why does this matter? The mineral that is attaching to the cell, the bacterial cell that's dead, calcium phosphate, when you eat a lot of phosphorus in

Unknown Speaker 25:56

your diet, body eats up a little bit,

Speaker 2 26:01

and it kicks out the extra phosphorus. That phosphorus molecule

Unknown Speaker 26:07

is missing two electrons, and it

Unknown Speaker 26:11

goes in searches. It marries

Speaker 2 26:18

two molecules together, and then sharing these two electrons, sticking around more people, carrying out calcium prostate. Your body can't use calcium prostate, so it kicks it out of the body, either through the saliva guts, running tartar on the teeth, or through the kidneys, running kidney stones. So you'll see more tartar buildup across some saliva ducts. I just had someone today. I worked this morning, and this person had really heavy calculus across from Corti molars. We have a little a little saliva duct. Will see this little

Unknown Speaker 26:59

bump on flap

Speaker 2 27:05

of tissue, another place where saliva comes into your mouth, right under your tongue. So those those two before the mouth, the right side of side, rinse over, wash the vein of the lower front teeth and saliva more frequently than the other places. So when we start cleaning your teeth, typically this is where we begin, because that's where there's the most part before anywhere else in the mouth by the time you can now there's laser fat, accumulated energy. Make sense? Yes. So S is for start. S is for start. So you want to put that toothpaste to work

Unknown Speaker 27:50

inside of the lower front teeth,

Speaker 2 27:53

like this. M is movement. So I talked about not literally brushing the teeth long strokes. It's going to ski over top of

Unknown Speaker 28:01

that turbo necks.

Speaker 2 28:07

Now, the bacteria that you don't get under don't reach under the gums. This bacteria covering up, it will cause ulcers to form on the inside of this turbine, and that makes the turbo that swell up,

Unknown Speaker 28:24

barely touch that starts to

Unknown Speaker 28:32

get the bristles in there and use movement. It's just

Unknown Speaker 28:35

a small wiggle

Speaker 2 28:38

or agitation, tear up the germs, they'll float away, and then inside of that, flow rate inside of

Unknown Speaker 28:53

that terminal. Okay, so M is for movement, yes,

Unknown Speaker 28:56

and I usually see the blue.

Speaker 2 29:00

And one man, wow. On the

Unknown Speaker 29:10

outside away from the

Unknown Speaker 29:19

teeth, yeah that's

Unknown Speaker 29:28

the correct angle to incline

Speaker 2 29:32

up for the upstairs and then down for the downstairs. Okay, straight down and check. I suggest that you place the bristles just below the gum line of the teeth have like your fingernails. Your teeth have this soup area, yeah, if you come from above, bristles tend to rest on this little point, little flap of tissue get all the way down to the lowest part of it. Okay, so I suggest patients start to lower the lowest part of the gum and work their way up. So I think l is level. This is really important most of the time when I see patients,

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

blog author image

Dr Michelle Gamble DN

DR. MICHELLE GAMBLE, DN is an author, educator, mentor, and speaker who specializes in assisting persons with chronic illness to heal themselves so they can break free from pain and frustration and live with power, protection, promise, purpose, promise, prosperity, and peace. She has been a professional educator for over 25 years and a natural health care provider for over 15 years. Dr. Gamble is also the mother of five children. She travels globally and around the country speaking and consulting with individuals and groups.

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