In one of the ancient excavations, the teeth of one of the mummies were found tied together with a wire of gold, and they used this method to fix the loosened teeth, and external teeth were added to it as a replacement for the dislocated teeth in the jaw.
Evidence for the first dentist before BC was found, attributed to “Hesy Re.” He wrote in his coffin of the great doctors who treat teeth, and it dates back to 2600 BC.
While I found the Ebers Papyrus, which dates back to the years from 1550 to 170 BC, in which it described many parts of the human mouth (the oral cavity), and it also showed how to treat a dental abscess as well as ways to treat gum swelling and the resulting pain.
At that time, dental treatment focused on medical prescriptions specialized in the gums and the mucous membrane lining the mouth, as well as what was found to refer to toothpaste, and this indicates that the ancient Egyptians were suffering from widespread diseases of the gums, as indicated by the mummy of one of the Egyptian kings.
They stuffed cavities with garlic and caraway seeds.
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