How to Remineralize Teeth Naturally & Reverse Tooth Decay

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Fit Bottomed Zone » Blog » Health » How to Remineralize Teeth Naturally & Reverse Tooth Decay
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If you’re like me, you grew up thinking that improper brushing, sugar consumption, and genetics were the only causes of bad teeth. Cavities and tooth decay meant a person needed to brush better and eat less sugar. And it certainly wasn’t possible to heal or remineralize teeth. Instead, dental fillings or fluoride treatments were the only answer.

I believed all that stuff, too. But, despite all the oral care options we have access to, tooth demineralization is still shockingly high. Nearly 90% of adults and 23% of children have dental caries (or tooth decay) in the US, according to the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research.

After experiencing decay myself, I thought the only way to reverse it was through dental interventions. However, after research and trial and error, I discovered the opposite is true. Diet plays a major role in the health of our mouth, and it’s possible to heal your teeth.

What Is Tooth Remineralization?

When a tooth is demineralized, the minerals have been stripped from it, causing dental caries or decay. Tooth remineralization is essentially its healing process. The body restores minerals in the tooth to help it heal. Calcium and phosphate are redeposited into the decayed tooth. This results in new hydroxyapatite crystals, which strengthen and heal teeth.

Although remineralization can occur, we need the right oral environment. This involves diet and good oral hygiene.

What Really Causes Tooth Decay?

Our bodies are made to heal (that’s their ultimate goal!). Broken bones and damaged tissues can regenerate when properly cared for. It makes sense that our teeth could also regenerate.

weston a price

Dr. Weston A. Price (a dentist) studied the diet and dental health of cultures with similar genetic backgrounds throughout the world. Some lived in primitive-type societies and ate primitive-type diets. Others ate a more modernized diet. 

The image on the left shows a stark example of this: the woman in the top right ate a primitive, whole-food, high-fat diet while the other women ate a more modernized diet.

In his book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, he shared his findings that many societies have perfect tooth spacing and no evidence of cavities. This is despite having no access to dentists or modern toothpaste. He also found that others with different (more modern) diets had lots of decay.

Sir (Dr.) Edward Mellanby (who discovered vitamin D) and his wife, Dr. May Mellanby, were also influential in discovering the roles of nutrients in oral health. These two contributed much research in the areas of bone and tooth health and mineral absorption. They discovered that tooth structure is determined during a child’s growth and poorly formed teeth are more likely to decay (pretty logical).

Phytic Acid’s Effect on Bone and Tooth Health

Phytic acid is a phosphorous molecule tightly bound with other molecules to form a type of phosphorus. This molecule isn’t easily absorbed by humans. More simply, it’s a compound present in grains, nuts, seeds, and legumes.

The body naturally converts it into phytates, which, according to some research, remove calcium from the body.

People who consume large amounts have higher rates of tooth decay, mineral deficiencies, and osteoporosis. Sadly, most American diets are high in grains, sugars, and vegetable oils and low in animal fats and fat-soluble vitamins. This is the exact opposite of what Drs. Mellanby found to be helpful for optimal tooth health.

Vitamin D and Phytic Acid

Removing phytic acid from the diet and adding minerals and fat-soluble vitamins allows bones to remineralize. Drs. Mellanby wanted to study if this would also occur in decaying teeth. 

They studied children with cavities and put them into three groups:

  • Group 1 – Regular diet plus oatmeal (high in phytic acid)
  • Group 2 – Regular diet plus vitamin D
  • Group 3 – Diet low in phytic acid plus vitamin D

They found that the first group continued to get cavities with little to no healing. The second group who received supplemented vitamin D showed some healing, but also got some new cavities. The third group showed very few new cavities and even had many existing cavities heal!

The Doctors’ Conclusion: Diet Affects Oral Health

These doctors all reached the same conclusion after years of research. They found that tooth structure and decay are largely determined by diet, especially three main factors:

  1. The presence of enough minerals in the diet.
  2. The presence of enough fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K) in the diet.
  3. The bioavailability of these nutrients and how well the body absorbs them. This is largely related to the presence of phytic acid and sugar in the diet.

These doctors showed in their research that teeth can heal themselves through remineralization.

What Helps Remineralize Teeth?

We know teeth can remineralize, but what can you do to correct tooth demineralization? There are several easy steps to take if you want to improve your tooth enamel. Things like eating a balanced diet rich in good fats, vitamins, and minerals. It’s also important to pay special attention to oral hygiene, help heal the tooth surface, and avoid dental interventions.

5 Ways to Remineralize Your Teeth

Improving the health of your teeth is possible if you follow a few simple guidelines for diet and oral hygiene. Not only will these tips help strengthen your teeth but they’ll lead to better overall health in your mouth and body.

1. Foods to Avoid for Healthy Teeth

It’s not possible to fully eliminate phytic acid from the diet. But you can minimize the foods that contain the highest amounts. This includes things like nuts, seeds, grains, and legumes.

Some preparations of foods can reduce it. Soaking and fermenting is one method. For instance, nuts have a high phytic acid content, but soaking them overnight in salt or lemon water and then rinsing and dehydrating them in the oven can greatly reduce it. In addition, cooking legumes in a pressure cooker like an Instant Pot can also reduce it.

Another food to avoid is sugary foods. This includes even natural sugars and starches. Limiting fruit and starchy foods (carbohydrates) like sweet potatoes will help with remineralization. Studies show that the more sugar we eat, the higher the risk of cavities. But it’s not just the amount but also the frequency. So, avoid eating snacks and focus on meals. And stay clear of sugary drinks and fruit juices.

Dentists commonly teach that sugar sitting on the teeth causes cavities, but it’s not so simple. Even if you brush after every meal, you can still get cavities from a high sugar or starch diet. This is because sugar depletes the nutrients we need for healthy teeth, weakening enamel. 

2. Foods That Remineralize Teeth

To rebuild tooth enamel, focus on mineral-rich vegetables for their micronutrients. Vegetables with calcium and vitamin D will help the enamel surface.

Homemade bone broths and pasture-raised proteins provide added minerals and vitamins. If you’re short on time, I recommend buying your broth online.

Another excellent food to help with tooth decay is healthy fats. Seafood (including sardines), olive oil, coconut oil, avocados, and other healthy fats support your teeth. In addition, pasture-raised, cultured butter helps increase the presence of fat-soluble vitamins.

3. Supplements to Help Heal Cavities

Sometimes we need to boost our mineral levels with supplements. Unfortunately, many foods are nutrient deficient because the soils are stripped in our modern world. Supplements help fill in the gaps.

I recommend these supplements for dental healing:

  • Vitamin D – In the study by Drs. Mellanby, when vitamin D was optimized cavities healed even without diet changes.  
  • Vitamin K27 – This vitamin helps the body send calcium where it needs to go. It strengthens teeth and bones. I like this one from Just Thrive.
  • Probiotics – Our oral microbiome is more important for our oral health than we realize. Having a healthy microbiome promotes healing.
  • Collagen – This is the main protein in our bodies and is what our bones, joints, teeth, and skin are made of.

4. Best Toothpaste and Oral Care Products to Remineralize Teeth

Practicing good oral hygiene habits are important in healing your teeth. Brushing twice a day and flossing daily is key to good oral hygiene!

Hydroxyapatite – A hydroxyapatite toothpaste is also vital to the remineralization process. Hydroxyapatite is a mineral that helps strengthen teeth. It’s a key ingredient in my Wellnesse toothpaste. Want to make your own? This homemade remineralizing toothpaste is a great option.

Charcoal Toothpaste – A few times a week, use an activated charcoal toothpaste to pull toxins from the mouth. My Wellnesse Charcoal Toothpaste makes it easy to do! It also has xylitol in it, an alternative to sugar as a sweetener. There’s evidence xylitol helps fight cavities. Avoiding sugar is important in the remineralization process.

Flossing – Another important step to a clean mouth. It helps remove plaque and food particles to promote a clean mouth. Wellnesse’s silk floss also has peppermint oil for its antimicrobial properties.

Oral Rinses – When I was healing my teeth, I made a mouthwash with calcium and magnesium powders (75% calcium, 25% magnesium) dissolved in water daily to help provide minerals. Oil pulling is another great way to support tooth and gum health. I recommend doing it for 5 to 10 minutes a day.

5. Stay Hydrated

It’s important to stay hydrated including when it comes to saliva production. Saliva is important for neutralizing mouth pH levels. Having a neutral to slightly alkaline mouth pH in the mouth leads to stronger enamel and less bacteria, two important pieces in tooth remineralization. In addition, drinking water prevents dry mouth, which also impacts the pH level.

Aim to drink at least half your weight in water each day to help your mouth’s pH level. I add minerals to my water (and salt) to make sure I’m staying hydrated. 

How Long Does It Take to Remineralize Teeth?

The remineralization process isn’t something that happens overnight. It can take several months or longer to strengthen your teeth. Following a plan to reduce phytic acid, eat a nutrient dense diet with minerals, and brush with remineralizing toothpaste with hydroxyapatite can help the process work faster.

My Experience With Remineralizing Teeth: Before and After

In early 2010, my regular dental check-up revealed I had some soft spots on my teeth. I also had one “official” cavity. The cavity wasn’t bad, and while they suggested getting it filled soon, it wasn’t a huge rush. They took X-rays, so I have picture evidence of my teeth at this time.

I had every intention of getting it filled quickly, but then life happened and I didn’t get back to the dentist for months. When I was finally ready, I’d read some interesting information about the ability of teeth to heal, so I decided to wait.

I did more research and read Cure Tooth Decay: Heal and Prevent Cavities with Nutrition by Rami Nagel. I also read accounts of people reversing dental damage, so I decided to give it a try. From the research, I created a diet and supplement regimen to try to heal my teeth.

After a couple of months, my teeth were whiter and my tooth sensitivity to cold was much better. This was big news to me as I used to have such sensitive teeth that drinking too cold of a drink could literally almost bring me to tears.

My Results

In the fall of 2011, I finally got around to going back to the dentist (I know, I know… every six months…). I didn’t mention the cavity and soft spots that needed to be fixed… and neither did the dentist!

The hygienist told me that my teeth and gums looked great and asked if I’d started using fluoride or fluoride toothpaste (my chart made it very clear I was anti-fluoride). I told her no but that I had been taking better care of my teeth lately (very true!). When the dentist checked my teeth, he didn’t mention any problem areas either. My teeth had remineralized, and the cavity was no longer there!

Tooth Remineralization Summary

While we’ve been made to think the only way to avoid cavities is to reduce sugar and brush our teeth, the research points to many more dietary causes. And dental interventions aren’t the only answer when it comes to trying to heal decay. Some time and patience, along with great oral hygiene habits and a specific diet, will help heal teeth without the need for fillings!

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Lauren Jefferis, board certified in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor or work with a doctor at SteadyMD.

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Steven Lin, who is a Board accredited dentist trained at the University of Sydney. With a background in biomedical science, he is a passionate whole-health advocate, focusing on the link between nutrition and dental health. Listen to my podcast or read the transcript of my interview with him here.

As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor or dentist.

Have you tried to remineralize your teeth? Would you try it with your teeth? If you did, what did you do and how did it go?

Did you know it's possible to remineralize teeth naturally? Teeth must be taken care of from the inside as well as the outside. This is how you do it.
Sources
  1. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research. ( 2022, November). Dental Caries (Tooth Decay).
  2. Price, Weston. A.  (2009). Nutrition and Physical Degeneration (Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation, Ed.). Price Pottenger. 
  3. Guyenet, S. (2009, March 28). Preventing Tooth Decay. Whole Health Source: Nutrition and Health Science.
  4. Nagel, R. (2010, March 26). Living With Phytic Acid. Weston A. Price.
  5. Moynihan P. (2016). Sugars and Dental Caries: Evidence for Setting a Recommended Threshold for Intake. Advances in nutrition (Bethesda, Md.), 7(1), 149–156. 
  6. Alosaimi, N., & Bernabé, E. (2022). Amount and Frequency of Added Sugars Intake and Their Associations with Dental Caries in United States Adults. International journal of environmental research and public health, 19(8), 4511.
  7. Nagel, R. (2009, January 1). Cure Tooth Decay: Heal and Prevent Cavities With Nutrition. Golden Child Publishing.

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Fit Bottomed Zone and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. fitbottomedzone.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Fit Bottomed Zone research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Fit Bottomed Zone Cookbook and The Fit Bottomed Zone 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

915 responses to “How to Remineralize Teeth Naturally & Reverse Tooth Decay”

  1. Irene Tiger Avatar
    Irene Tiger

    I’ve had more “little” cavities recently than I’d be comfortable with, even though i’m a religious brusher and flosser, so I really want to take charge of preventing cavities, and clearly my current dental hygine routine isn’t working. I’ve now been eating grain free and limiting sugars and phytic acid, started making bone broth (I have some chicken bones brewing in my crock pot right now) and I have it on my to-do list to make your Remineralizing Tooth Powder.

  2. Rene Perry Avatar
    Rene Perry

    I love this article. I am on a very slow journey to remove commercial anything from my home..(slow slow process) I have even found a recipe to make my own toothpaste.. I am going to print this article and share it with my boss. I am a registered
    Dental assistant in a pedactric office and our drs stress on changing diet and are very concervative on fillings. We watch a lot of areas that look like cavities and get the parents to brush aneh ad floss their kids more. I
    Disagree with no fluoride as I have seen it aid in the reminerlization of cavities with proper oral hygiene. But I do agree in small moderations. I agree that we have been over fluoridated when the pediatritions were prescribing fluoride drops and water is fluorinated. Its interesting that the high fluoride toothpaste we sell in our office has calcium in it…and vitamin D almost dominates the study. I agree with some of the comments that most people will not comply or just simply are uninformed or can’t afford it. But that is where we as dental professionals need to get the word out. Thank you for this article.

  3. Kaela Cogswell Avatar
    Kaela Cogswell

    I’m newly on the GAPS diet and looking to heal many factors of my health including sensitive and plaque-covered teeth. I was wondering, when rinsing with hydrogen peroxide, did you dilute it first or just swish with it straight? Also did you rinse your mouth with water afterwards or let it sit? Thanks!

    1. Fit Bottomed Zone Avatar
      Fit Bottomed Zone

      Usually dilute half and half with water and rinse after…

  4. Sheri k Avatar
    Sheri k

    I am eager to learn more and start implementing your regime. What is the daily dose of Vitamin D you supplement?

  5. Andy Avatar

    Hi! This is unbelievable. Just received my batch of Butter Oil/FCLO capsules and my Vitamin Ds. Firstly, thank you for taking the time to help other people. Secondly, how many capsules of FLCO would you suggest? The packet says to take 2 but I wanted to hear your opinion if possible 🙂 Thanks, Andy.

  6. Scarlett Avatar
    Scarlett

    I love your website! Thanks for all the good info! I had a questions about Ora Wellness brushing blend. The base in this is almond oil. Do nut oils have phytic acid in them? I’d love someones opinion.

  7. Margueritelh Avatar
    Margueritelh

    I have brushed too hard and gotten gum recession near my upper back molar. I would like suggestions as to how to fix this so I do not have to do the skin graft the denist suggests.

    1. Fit Bottomed Zone Avatar
      Fit Bottomed Zone

      I’d email them at OraWellness.com as they dealt with gum issues too and might have some good suggestions…

  8. Ivy Vasileva Avatar
    Ivy Vasileva

    A lot of things you mention here make sense to me as an oral hygienist. Yet, I also have some comments and questions too.
    From the research of Dr. Weston A Price I could conclude things I (and also most of my colleges I hope) already know from school and reading dental literature on regular bases.
    Indeed when a tooth is damaged or a cavity is starting to develop the body (read the tooth) will try to protect itself by developing secondary or even tertiary dentine using the odontoblast cells in the pulp chamber.
    What I couldn’t make out of the study (and this is essential to me) is how many people were participating in it? Why wasn’t there a control group so the other tree groups (regular diet+ oatmeal; regular diet+ vit. D and diet low in phytic acid + vit. D) should be compared to? What did these people do on oral hygiene during the trial…. only brushing? Whit what? Or maybe brushing and
    flossing? How often per day?
    For others those questions may not seem to be so important but in the dental scientific world the are. Only when every single part of a study can be explained and the produced results are such beyond any doubt they are adopted by the worldwide dental community as true facts.
    Said all that I know why your teeth became whiter; stronger and your gums healthier when you started the diet.
    – using calcium and magnesium powder to brush your teeth with will ALWAYS make your teeth less sensitive. The same ingredients are used in regular sensitive toothpaste.
    – rinsing your mouth with Hydrogen Peroxide will make your teeth whiter as H.P. is the active ingredient in all dental
    bleaching products.
    – active charcoal also have the tendency of whitening teeth but because of obvious reasons is far less used by people
    worldwide.
    – eating foods that contain less sugar and starches will benefit the growth of mouth bacteria who are NOT the cause of cavities or gum disease.

    But here are my arguments:
    – while odontoblasts can produce new dentine they cannot produce enamel! Enamel is formed during the 3-4th month of the pregnancy by a complex proses and once a tooth has erupted and enamel has been damaged nor the body, nor a dental treatment can repair/ regrow it.
    – dental sensitivity is caused of thinner enamel or the absence of it. For example, if one’s gums are staring to retract because of using a toothbrush that has hard filaments or one is brushing violently and damaging the gums a gingival recession will occur, exposing the dentine underneath. Dentine has a very different structure then enamel, it has small canals (dental tubulli) who
    are the cause of the hypersensitivity. Minerals like calcium; magnesium; sodium; potassium close up the canals and the sensitivity
    is lower or completely gone. When one stops using those minerals they will slowly wear off and the sensitivity will be back.
    – using Hydrogen Peroxide to rinse your mouth every day is not a good idea. Different studies has discovered that H.P. have the ability to make mucous membranes drier. Saliva is a very important part of the oral cavity. It helps with the food digestion; it makes the tissues flexible; it contains enzymes who fight harmful bacteria and rinses off food debris and plaque. Have you ever waken up in the middle of the night and your mouth felt as it was on fire and your tong was dry and leathery?…. well, this is how people who have chronicle dry mouth describe the feeling.
    – I went to the website of Ora Wellness Brushing Blend. Although the ingredients they use are all scientific proven to work
    (killing bacteria; soothing and supporting tissue healing) it will take some time for people in general to use to the idea that a toothpaste will actually become a tooth oil. Also testimonials of client(s) who claim that they had severe gum disease with pockets of 10mm. and after using the products they were 3mm. is a complete nonsense.
    For one to have a pocket of 10mm. means that not only the gum is inflamed but also the jaw bone underneath has been affected by
    the periodontitis. While gums are able to heal and no permanent damage will appear after inflammation, with the jaw bone is a different story. Because of the infection the bone is slowly dissolved, what causes the pocket formation. Dissolved bone tissue never regrows, but will stay a bone defect forever. There are possibilities to reconstruct the bone defect by transplanting bone from one place in the mouth to the other. Also artificial bone may be used. Usually this treatment gives great results but can be invasive (if
    you have a mouth full of pockets for example) and is not cheap at all.
    – also on their website I read about the fact that dentists do not check for gum disease when one goes for the annual
    check up. It was even stated by a Dr. David Kennedy that “ Currently, general dentists do little if any treatment of gum disease; in fact
    most dentists have the malady themselves.”
    Although I do not live/ work in the U.S.A I find this very hard to believe. Periodontitis (gumsidease) is second largest oral disease after
    caries (cavity formation). One must be a very poor dentist to ignore such widely spread and dangerous infection in a client’s mouth. Besides if that would be the case and a client visit regularly; follows the dentist’s advies; X-ray’s has been taken when necessary and
    chronicle gum disease has not be notices by the practitioner the client can and must sue this dentist. And if American dentists ignore
    gum disease, according to Dr. Kennedy , they must have their hands full of court cases and loosing their practitioner papers on a daily bases.

  9. Cody Ramsey Avatar
    Cody Ramsey

    You said you were swishing with calcium and magnesium powders? What were the steps for that? And did you mix them together or so it separate? Thank you.

    1. Fit Bottomed Zone Avatar
      Fit Bottomed Zone

      I just bought a calcium magnesium powder and added 1/2 tsp to water to swish with…

  10. Leah Avatar

    Please check out “oil pulling” with coconut oil. I have been using this method and had a fantastic check-up.

  11. Rebekah Lloyd Avatar
    Rebekah Lloyd

    Hi, I am so glad I found your site. I have been wanting to do our own dental care treatments at home. I do have a few questions before starting. Do you follow this regiment even after your dental problems were solved, or did you cut back on the routine. Also, do you take the Cod oil everyday? Last, it would not work to cut all beams and rice from our diet. Will it be enough to limit them for dinner meals only and we usually eat them three times a week. Thanks Rebekah

    1. Fit Bottomed Zone Avatar
      Fit Bottomed Zone

      We do take the FCLO everyday, but reduce the dose once cavities are healed. I’d soak the beans and rice first to make them safer…

  12. Peggy Medina Avatar
    Peggy Medina

    I have been trying to leave a comment on here, but keep having trouble! So I am living in Bolivia and my 6 year old son has some really deep cavities, three that they say need root canals. The dentist did A root canal (baby tooth) on my son without asking me first, I was really upset because I had already bought the cure tooth decay book, and wanted to heal the cavities. So never again will I go back to them, but anyways I was wondering if I don’t have access to raw milk and beef that isn’t for sure grass fed will the protocol still work? I can get raw cheese,milk and butter that I assume is raw because it goes sour fast and they say its fresh, but like I said I don’t know if its grass fed, I think it’s grass and supplemented with grains. The same with organ meats. Should i consume the organ meats I have available? Also, We are doing cod liver oil and butter oil, what would the dose be for a 6 year old?

    1. Fit Bottomed Zone Avatar
      Fit Bottomed Zone

      You can probably still do it with what you have available. My kids get 1/2 to 1 tsp of the cod liver oil butter blend when I’m trying to heal a cavity…

  13. Bill Abraham Avatar
    Bill Abraham

    I like your post, and was wondering if I could ask a question. In the realm of sprouts, I generally do include lentil and sunflower seed sprouts in my diet. I was wondering what your thoughts on sprouting were, since this process is used to resolve a lot of the inhibiting factors in seeds (I use that as a blanket statement for grains, legumes, nuts, and seeds, since that’s what they all are).

  14. Gloria Powell Avatar
    Gloria Powell

    First of all, let me say that I LOVE your site, and I mostly keep up with it on Twitter because aI am so busy, but I greatly appreciate all yolu share!!

    I had three cavities almost two years ago. I left them untreated. When I went to the dentist last week, I had no cavities and only two “soft spots”. It so happened that inthat two years, I had, coincidentally, done some of the things above–cut grains drastically, cut sugar even more drastically, started using coconut oil, and started using vitamin D. So, I am a true believer! I have another question,though…I have one tooth that has a deep filling, and there was a “dark spot” (cavity?) in there under the filling that was getting close to the nerve. Is that a case where the above plan would work, or is that one too far gone? My option, of course, is “a root canal when it starts to bother me”. Also, should almond milk be avoided when doing this? What do you do for calcium?

    1. Kadee Avatar

      I had a dark spot on an x-ray that appeared under a previous filling a long time ago. When the doctor went in to fix the decay she was surprised to find that it wasn’t actually tooth decay, she didn’t know what it was, only that it was normal enamel. I mention it because it seems very odd that one tooth would be decaying while the others are healing… I’d be interested to know if anybody else has had a similar exerience to mine or yours.

  15. Mini Avatar

    Is the dairy crucial for reminerilization? We are a mostly grain free home…but we do rely heavily on nuts and seeds. My youngest daughter has 12!!!! cavities…and I am desperate to start this regime. Followed by my second youngest with 4 and Me with 1. Would you reccommend I cut out all nuts and seeds as our dental health is pretty poor right now? We don’t eat dairy due to allergies…although if it is crucial to heal our teeth should we should give it a try anyway? confused.

    1. Kadee Avatar

      I don’t know if you got a reply. I think it’s the Calcium that’s the most important thing to get from the dairy in terms of re-mineralization, although I’m not a doctor or a certified nutritionist, so there may be other things in the milk that interact to help bones heal (teeth are bones too :)). Also, Vitamin D is SUPER, SUPER important to absorb the calcium. (Almost every disease I research has some connection to vitamin D deficiency when studies are preformed… coincidence? I don’t know, but my personal opinion is ‘no!’) Anyway, good luck!

  16. Para Avatar

    Thanks for this. I’m looking at doing this for my son who’s almost 6 and complains often of a tooth hurting. He’s a very fussy eater though so I’m not sure just how much he’ll agree to. Can only try!

  17. Stacey Ballard Magliaro Avatar
    Stacey Ballard Magliaro

    I love this:) I have been mostly following the Weston Price Diet for a few years now (I had chronic lyme and it was part of my stragedy to get better) but recently after a pregnancy / nursing a voracious babe I am having some issues with my teeth . I am going full froce WP now hoping to fix these problems with raw dairy and FCLO. I eat low phytates compared to most but think maybe I need to do better. I wish there were local families to connect with following a similar path!

  18. Lee G. Avatar

    I started my family eating this way about 9 days ago. We already feel an improvement in how our bodies feel. I had no idea it could be beneficial for our teeth as well. I mostly cook with coconut oil so we are definitely getting that aspect. I will but the other products/supplements later this week. I have had poor dental health in the last few years, I have a major cavity facing root canal, and I have bone loss and gum loss (from having chronic tonsillitis for YEARS before they would yank ’em. I am going to try this before I go back to the dentist. I will let you know (and take pictures) in 6 months how it worked!! Thanks Fit Bottomed Zone!!

  19. Allyson Avatar

    Would you be able to tell me the difference between cod liver oil and fermented cod liver oil. I have some cod liver oil softgels. Would they work, too?

    1. Fit Bottomed Zone Avatar
      Fit Bottomed Zone

      There is a tremendous difference in the quality and availability of the nutrients and many regular cod liver oil products are rancid.

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