A Bite Out Of History
People of ancient times believed
that the stabbing pain of a toothache was caused by a toothworm, which
either had appeared spontaneously or had bored its way into the tooth.
If the tooth pain was severe, it meant that the worm was thrashing
about, but if the aching stopped, then the worm was resting. Cultures
all over the world, many of whom had no contact with each other, held
stubbornly to this myth. The folklore of the toothworm persisted from
ancient times to the beginning of the eighteenth century.
Folk Cures
• Bee: Honey, a product of bees, was used to coat an infected
tooth in the Middle Ages. People smeared their aching teeth with honey
and waited all night with tweezers in hand, ready to pluck out the
toothworm.
• Donkey: In ancient Greece, donkey’s milk was used as
a mouthwash to strengthen the gums and teeth.
• Frog: Besides spitting in a frog’s mouth for toothache
relief, these web-footed creatures were applied to a person’s
cheek or to the head on the side of the ailing tooth.
• Onion: In the Middle Ages a slice of onion was applied to
the ear on the side of the aching tooth.
Reprinted with permission from "Toothworms and Spider Juice:
An Illustrated History of Dentistry" – Loretta Frances
Ichord, Millerbrook Press.
© copyright 2007, Falls Cosmetic Dental Center, all rights reserved