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Zach Birchall's avatar

A personal anecdote to add: I noticed a small cavity forming in one of my teeth, while not painful it was a legitimate hole opening in a tooth, and so I started chewing xylitol gum because I heard Dr Rhonda Patrick say it could help with cavities and it did for me, the tooth regrew and I no longer have a random hole in my tooth

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Cafe Comments by Lauri Harris's avatar

Dr McCullough, do you realize that xylitol even in very small amounts can cause liver failure and death in dogs? I have a difficult time with something so toxic to dogs being “healthy” for humans. I wonder if xylitol studies are paid for by Big Pharma to only look at the results Big Pharma wants while ignoring the long-term horrific health outcomes. You can barely find gum without xylitol in it. And xylitol is in many sugar-free products. Several people have fed xylitol containing peanut butter to their dogs as a treat and their dogs died of liver failure within a few days.

https://vcahospitals.com/know-your-pet/xylitol-toxicity-in-dogs#:~:text=This%20occurs%20because%20xylitol%20can,or%20even%20death%20in%20dogs.

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