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By Staff Writer, Health Wire Insider Posted: Friday, July 17, 2026

They show up in dental records as anomalies.
People in their 70s and 80s with no fillings, no crowns, no gum recession. Teeth that measure clinically like they belong to someone forty years younger.
They exist across every demographic. Every diet. Every hygiene habit category.
Researchers have been noticing them for years. The question nobody answered until recently: what do they have in common?
Genetics was ruled out early. Twin studies — one sibling with perfect teeth at 80, the other with significant decay — showed the gap wasn't in the DNA.
Diet didn't explain it. Some of these outliers drank coffee daily, ate sugar, did nothing special. By every conventional measure, they should have been in worse shape than people who were careful.
And it wasn't hygiene discipline. Several had brushed irregularly for most of their lives.
So what was different?
Researchers kept returning to one variable: not how many organisms were present in the mouth, but what kind.
Specifically — what was absent.
The outliers shared one measurable characteristic that most people with progressive dental decline didn't: the near-complete absence of something that standard dental hygiene isn't designed to target. Not the organisms brushing and flossing address. A different class entirely — one that responds to conventional hygiene products in the opposite direction.
Not slower. Faster.
Which is why some people brush faithfully, floss consistently, visit the dentist twice a year, and still watch their dental health decline year after year. They're following the right protocol for the wrong problem.
Sound familiar?
A medical researcher named John Berman spent two years tracking down an answer after watching his wife follow exactly that pattern: careful hygiene, regular cleanings, unexplained deterioration that kept getting worse no matter what she tried.
He recently sat down to explain what the research found — what the outliers had in their oral environment that most people don't, why standard hygiene doesn't reach it, and what the research found when the actual pathogen was targeted directly.
The answer isn't a new toothbrush. It's something the 80-year-olds with intact teeth had in common with a remote Alaskan community that had been addressing this specific organism for centuries — without ever knowing what it was called.
Watch the interview — what the outliers had that most people don’t >>

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