Sam had always been the life of the party. After retiring, his dream was simple: weekly barbecues, grandchildren in the yard, and laughter until the neighbors complained. Instead, he sat alone at the corner of his own dinner table. His breath was so bad his wife had stopped kissing him properly for two years. One of his front teeth was visibly loose. He had started eating pureed food out of fear it would fall out while he chewed. Every night, he ground his teeth until his jaw ached. He had visited eight specialists before Dr. Sutton. Not one of them took his pain seriously.
His gums were the worst Dr. Sutton had ever seen. His sinuses were chronically blocked. He could barely sleep. And every standard blood and allergy test came back completely clean — which, to nine different doctors, meant there was nothing wrong with him.
During one of their sessions, Sam pulled out a newspaper clipping — a photograph of a 2,500-year-old tooth excavated from an archaeological dig. The tooth was intact. No cavities. No cracks. No sign of decay. "Look at this, Doc. Those people didn't even know what a toothbrush was. How is that possible?"
That question stopped Dr. Sutton cold. He spent the next four weeks barely sleeping, cross-referencing every clinical study he could find. And then, buried in a little-known paper about the oral microbiome, he found the answer. It was not what was in Sam's mouth that was destroying him. It was what was missing.
What Dr. Sutton discovered next would change Sam's life — and the lives of over 150,000 people who followed.
The specific oral probiotic strains identified. The delivery format that gets them past stomach acid alive.
All of this is covered in the free informational presentation available through the link below.
Watch Sam's Story and the Research Behind ItThis content is for educational purposes. Individual results vary. Consult a dental professional for medical advice.