Tooth Sensitivity or Trigeminal Neuralgia? How the Tayyibat System Reveals the Real Cause of Your Tooth Pain

Do you feel sudden pain in your teeth when drinking cold or hot water? Does your dentist tell you that your teeth are healthy with no cavities, but the pain returns? In the Tayyibat System, Dr. Diaa Al-Awadi, may Allah have mercy on him, presents a completely different explanation: this pain may not be from your teeth at all, but from trigeminal neuralgia resulting from colon inflammation and abdominal pressure. The pain you feel in your mouth is a referred neural pain from an inflamed nerve, not local tooth sensitivity. If you are new here, you may benefit from learning about What is the Tayyibat System? or reviewing the article on Allowed and Forbidden Foods in the Tayyibat System, as well as reading the Biography of Dr. Diaa Al-Awadi, and finally you can Download the Tayyibat System PDF.

The Trigeminal Nerve: The Nerve That Controls Half Your Face

The trigeminal nerve is the fifth cranial nerve and one of the largest nerves in the human body. It divides into three main branches covering the eye and forehead, the cheek, nose, and upper jaw, and the lower jaw and lower teeth. This nerve is responsible for sensation in the entire face and for the movement of chewing. When this nerve becomes inflamed for any reason, it sends pain signals to all the areas it supplies, including the teeth. Dr. Diaa Al-Awadi, may Allah have mercy on him, clearly states: “If your trigeminal nerve is inflamed, all your teeth will hurt you.” This means the pain does not originate from the teeth themselves, but from the nerve that supplies them.

Non-Distinct, Non-Specific Pain: How to Distinguish Between Tooth Pain and Nerve Pain?

One of the most important criteria Dr. Diaa Al-Awadi, may Allah have mercy on him, provides for distinguishing between true tooth pain and trigeminal nerve pain is that nerve pain is “non-distinct, non-specific, with unknown causes.” In true tooth decay, you can pinpoint the painful tooth precisely. In gum inflammation, the area is specific. But in trigeminal neuralgia, the pain spreads across several teeth or the entire half of the mouth, may move from one tooth to another, and you cannot precisely identify its source. The pain may come suddenly and disappear suddenly, and may increase with hot or cold drinks, but x-rays and examinations show completely healthy teeth. This contradiction between pain severity and dental health is the most important sign.

What Causes Trigeminal Neuralgia? The Answer: The Colon and Abdominal Pressure

The critical question is: why does the trigeminal nerve become inflamed? The answer Dr. Diaa Al-Awadi, may Allah have mercy on him, provides returns us to the central concept in the Tayyibat System: the bloated colon and abdominal pressure. When the colon fills with waste and gas and expands, it presses on the diaphragm, and this pressure transmits to the chest, neck, and head. Chronic pressure and inflammation resulting from an unhealthy colon cause inflammation in the cranial nerves, including the trigeminal nerve. There is not necessarily a problem with the nerve itself; rather, it suffers from a general inflammatory environment originating in the gut. Dr. Diaa explains that this inflammation disappears when the colon is repaired and returns to its natural state.

“Tooth Sensitivity”: A Fake Diagnosis That Hides Ignorance of the Cause

Dr. Diaa Al-Awadi, may Allah have mercy on him, strongly criticizes the concept of “tooth sensitivity” as a medical diagnosis. Tooth sensitivity to hot and cold is usually explained as erosion of the enamel layer or exposure of the dentin layer. But he believes this explanation becomes illogical when the sensitivity is in several non-adjacent teeth, or when the sensitivity returns despite using special toothpastes. Dr. Diaa says that blaming the teeth themselves is a superficial understanding of the problem. The real cause is often the trigeminal nerve suffering from general inflammation coming from the colon. Labeling the symptoms as “tooth sensitivity” gives a false impression that the problem is local and can be solved with toothpaste, while the roots are much deeper.

How Is the Colon Connected to the Trigeminal Nerve? The Hidden Pathway of Inflammation

To understand the relationship between the colon and tooth pain, we must trace the pathway of inflammation. The bloated, diseased colon releases inflammatory compounds (cytokines) and bacterial toxins (LPS) that cross into the bloodstream through a leaky gut wall. These substances travel in the blood and reach the central and peripheral nervous system. The trigeminal nerve, like other nerves, has a membrane called myelin that insulates the nerve fibers. Chronic inflammation attacks this membrane and causes irritation and inflammation of the nerve. The result: pain signals are sent to the brain from areas that appear healthy. This is why mysterious tooth pain improves in many patients after just two weeks of applying the Tayyibat System and repairing the colon, without any dental treatment.

Clinical Examples: When Tooth Pain Disappears by Repairing the Colon

Dr. Diaa Al-Awadi, may Allah have mercy on him, cites multiple cases of his patients who suffered from recurring, mysterious tooth pain. They underwent examinations and x-rays that showed healthy teeth, visited multiple dentists without benefit. After starting the Tayyibat System (abstaining from white flour, dairy, eggs, legumes, and raw vegetables), the colon began to empty and its bloating decreased, and after 10-14 days, the tooth pain disappeared completely. This phenomenon is not a coincidence; it is practical confirmation that the source of pain was not the teeth, but the inflamed colon causing trigeminal nerve inflammation. When some patients returned to eating forbidden foods, the tooth pain returned within days. This connection cannot be ignored.

Diagnosing Trigeminal Neuralgia: When to Think About the Colon Before the Teeth?

If you suffer from pain in your teeth, jaw, or face, and dental examinations have found no clear cause, this is the right time to think about the colon. Indicating signs include: widespread pain in several non-specific teeth, pain moving from one tooth to another, normal x-rays and examinations, pain accompanied by abdominal bloating, constipation, diarrhea, or gas, pain that improves and sometimes disappears and returns without clear cause, and the presence of other colon-related symptoms such as acid reflux or mysterious back pain. In these cases, try abstaining from forbidden foods in the Tayyibat System for two weeks before starting costly or unnecessary dental treatments.

Conclusion

Trigeminal neuralgia in the Tayyibat System is a root-cause explanation for what is mistakenly called “tooth sensitivity.” The pain you feel when drinking hot or cold water is not necessarily from your teeth. The trigeminal nerve that supplies half your face and teeth may be inflamed due to a general inflammatory environment originating from the bloated, diseased colon. This pain is “non-distinct, non-specific, with unknown causes,” and dental examinations may remain normal despite the severity of the pain. Treating this condition is not about toothpastes, fillings, or root canals, but about repairing the colon: removing foods that cause its bloating and inflammation (white flour, dairy, eggs, legumes, raw vegetables). When the colon improves, general inflammation decreases, the trigeminal nerve calms down, and the mysterious tooth pain disappears.


Read Also

This article is a simplified and organized summary of the video content, aiming to arrange the ideas and concepts mentioned in it and connect them to their context within the Tayyibat System. You can watch the video on YouTube here.


What is trigeminal neuralgia in the Tayyibat System?

It is inflammation of the fifth cranial nerve (Trigeminal Nerve) that supplies half the face and teeth. Its cause is not a problem with the nerve itself, but a general inflammatory environment originating from the bloated, diseased colon and abdominal pressure.

How is trigeminal nerve pain different from true tooth pain?

True tooth pain is limited to a specific tooth and can be identified on x-rays. Trigeminal nerve pain is “non-distinct, non-specific, with unknown causes,” spreading across several teeth or half the mouth, with normal dental examinations.

What is Dr. Diaa’s explanation for the common concept of “tooth sensitivity”?

He considers it a fake diagnosis that hides ignorance of the real cause. Tooth sensitivity to hot and cold is often a referred neural pain from an inflamed trigeminal nerve, not a local problem in the enamel or dentin layer.

How is the colon connected to trigeminal neuralgia?

The bloated colon releases inflammatory compounds and bacterial toxins that cross into the bloodstream and reach the nervous system. Chronic inflammation attacks the myelin sheath insulating the trigeminal nerve, causing irritation and referred pain to the teeth.

When should I suspect that my tooth pain is coming from my colon rather than my teeth?

When the pain is widespread across several non-specific teeth, dental x-rays and examinations are normal, the pain is accompanied by abdominal bloating, constipation, or gas, and it improves and worsens with changes in colon condition.

How can I test the relationship between tooth pain and the colon practically?

By abstaining from forbidden foods in the Tayyibat System (white flour, dairy, eggs, legumes, raw vegetables) for two weeks. Many patients notice their mysterious tooth pain disappears or significantly improves during this period.

Can tooth pain be the only symptom of colon inflammation?

Yes, in some cases, mysterious tooth pain may be the main symptom without obvious digestive symptoms. This makes diagnosis difficult, but pain improvement with colon repair confirms the relationship.

Does the Tayyibat System treat trigeminal neuralgia without medication?

Yes, by removing the source of primary inflammation (the bloated colon) through dietary change. When the colon calms down, inflammation levels throughout the body decrease, the trigeminal nerve calms down, and pain disappears without needing painkillers or neurological medications.

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