Saturday, November 14, 2009

Is There A Link Between Teeth Problems And Heart Disease?

I'm sure it relates in some way to bad breath and tooth decay.

Is There A Link Between Teeth Problems And Heart Disease?
Yes, you're right. There's a relation between teeth problems and heart disease -- specially the role of oral bacteria in the onset of cardiovascular disease. The cause for this is poor oral hygiene, which allows certain pathogens in the mouth to accelerate the formation of plaque in the aorta (the main artery of the body supplying oxygenated blood to the circulatory system).





The link between oral health and systemic health has been the subject of university research for a while and also actively reported by medical journals like the Journal of Periodontology. But the critical thing for you and me -- the folks outside the labs -- is to be aware of the symptoms of teeth problems when they first occur. Symptoms that include bad breath, tooth decay and gingivitis.





Bad breath may seem like a minor 'social problem' at first, but it signals the onset of something bigger on the health front. Diet, drinks and lifestyle all contribute to diseases that few take seriously till they become full-blown maladies. Take care of the root cause -- the minor thing -- so you don't have to worry about how big a cavity or bleeding gums can become.
Reply:I don't think it does
Reply:Bacterial Endocarditis


Can have several causes, one of which is bacteria entering the blood stream during dental work (blood is normal completly free of bacteria). If Streptococci ,which are part of the normal flora of the human mouth, enter the blood stream, they can circulate and come to infect the inner layer of the heart - the endocardium -especially if it is already in some why damaged or if the valves have a defect.

baby shoes

No comments:

Post a Comment

 
vc .net