www.answers.com/topic/sodium-perborate

sodium perborate n. A white odorless crystalline compound, NaBO 2 H 2 O 2 3H 2 O, used as a mild alkaline oxidizing agent in dentifrices, as a topical antiseptic and deodorant.

http://www.borax.com/detergents/bleaching.html

I believe this is referring to Borax. The borax website is pretty interesting. But maybe you can buy a denture bleach at the drug store made from it. Or maybe you could just mix up a solution of borax and water. Boric acid used to be used as an eyewash for pinkeye. Google is good for this kind of research, too.

Kathryn

On Feb 15, 2009, at 1:26 PM, Paula Perry wrote:

Thanks so much for the information Brooks.  I have never heard of Sodium Perborate. Could you explain the protocol and where it may be obtained?
Thanks again,
Paula
----- Original Message -----
From:  Brooks Bradley
To: [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, February 15, 2009 1:17 PM
Subject: Re: CS>my experience with CS and H2O2.COMMENT


I do not intend to be adversarial, but I believe one can
over-react to what they perceive to be a "negative presentation".
In point-of-fact, shrinkage of inflamed gum tissue beds surrounding
the teeth is a typical...and desirable....result when using various
protocols to address gum inflamations/infections.....including those of long-standing. The comments that Erik makes in his post are almost exactly what occurs when effective protocols are instituted for gum conditions such as he states. It has been our experience that most of these insults have a large anaerobic component. The receding of the gum tissue is, merely, tightening of the tissue-bed around the teeth proper. Usually, it IS NOT an expressed gum-tissue burn.....if that was the case there would be a shedding of the destroyed tissue. I do not contend that one cannot damage, even destroy, gum tissue by applying powerful tissue-burners (e.g. silver nitrate, various acid fractions...yes, even Hydrogen Peroxide, but at considerably higher than percentages easily obtainable by the general public. Deep tissue damage from H202 does not, generally, present until one gets beyond 16% strength.) Sodium Perborate, has been....for many decades....quite an effective treatment for gum infection insults. Although the gums appear to be rapidly receding, because of the reduction of the inflamation, in actuality, this is just the natural tightening of the tissue-beds around the teeth----as healing progresses and the swollen insult reduces. As a point of elaboration on this protocol: for almost, just pennies, the Sodium Perborate-based treatment has accomplished (in thousands of cas

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