When Healing Doesn’t Happen: The Dental Infections You Can’t See

14/01/2026

This episode is essential listening for anyone struggling with chronic health symptoms, inflammation, or unexplained fatigue, especially if you've had past dental work.

Fresh from an advanced training in Boston, Hana and Eva unpack the overlooked role of jaw infections, hidden cavitations, and unhealed extraction sites in long-term systemic issues. These areas — often silent — can block the body's natural ability to heal.

They share insights from Professor Dr. Alexander Ganati, a global leader in ceramic implantology and biological dentistry, and explain how removing dead teeth, metals, and chronic infections can transform everything from joint pain to anxiety.

"Just because it's not visible, doesn't mean it's not the root cause."

Invisible Infections, Real Symptoms

One of the most powerful lessons from Boston?
The assumption that bone always regrows after a tooth extraction is wrong.

Through 3D CBCT imaging, dentists like Dr. Ganati are now identifying unhealed sockets — filled not with healthy bone, but with trapped bacteria, toxins, and dead tissue.

These hidden pockets are linked to symptoms like:

  • Frozen shoulders

  • Chronic joint pain

  • Panic or fear of heights

  • Autoimmune-like inflammation

Eva shares a story of a client who regained mobility, energy, and emotional clarity after removing four dead teeth — changes she didn't expect, but immediately felt.

What Are Cavitations?

Also known as NICO, FDOK, or closed socket residuums, cavitations are:

  • Unhealed areas in the jawbone after tooth extractions

  • Spaces where infections, metals, or dead tissue remain

  • Invisible to the naked eye — only detectable with proper imaging

These areas affect your oral microbiome, compromise immune function, and create silent systemic stress.

How True Healing Starts

Eva and Hana explain DUO Smile's 3-phase biological surgery protocol:

  1. Pre-care: deep dental hygiene and ozone therapy

  2. Metal removal: amalgams, retainers, metal crowns

  3. Surgery: cavitation cleanup, ceramic implants, PRF therapy

Healing begins before surgery, with hydration, nutrients, and mindful prep.

"If you're dehydrated, your cells can't regenerate. No protocol can override that."

Water, Microbiome & Pre-Surgery Prep

Hana and Eva emphasize the importance of:

  • Filtered water — for drinking and even showering

  • 2–3L per day, starting four weeks pre-surgery

  • Salt water rinses to support oral pH and beneficial bacteria

  • Supplementation to strengthen the body's terrain

They also explain how metals, bad bacteria, and poor hydration shift the oral microbiome — weakening your entire system from the mouth down.

What This Episode Teaches:

  • How hidden jaw infections affect your full-body health

  • Why root canals and metals disrupt immune balance

  • The latest science on cavitations and bone healing

  • How to prepare for dental surgery (physically and nutritionally)

  • The power of salt water rinses and microbiome-friendly habits

  • What to expect emotionally and physically during the healing process

Recommended by Hana & Eva:

  • CBCT 3D imaging – to detect jawbone cavitations

  • Salt water rinses – 1 tsp salt in 1 cup of water, twice daily

  • Pre-surgery hydration – 2–3L of filtered water every day

  • Ceramic implants – biocompatible and toxin-free

  • DUO Smile Protocol – a biological approach to real dental healing

Why This Episode Matters

Your symptoms may not be random.
They may be dental.
And until you clear the true source — deep in the jaw — healing might stay out of reach.

This episode is a roadmap for those who've tried everything and are ready to try the right thing.

"The jaw holds more than teeth. It holds the stories your body hasn't been able to let go of — until now."

Ready to Heal from the Source?

Start here:

✅ Get CBCT imaging to check past extractions and root canals

✅ Hydrate daily — 2 to 3 liters of filtered water

✅ Rinse with salt water to shift your oral microbiome

✅ Remove metals before surgery

✅ Support your body before, during, and after the procedure