Thursday, November 12, 2009

Is there a link between tooth decay and cardiovascular disease?

What exactly is the correlation between tooth decay and heart disease??? Does is include the young as well, or is it an indicator/symptom of just older people???


HELP!

Is there a link between tooth decay and cardiovascular disease?
First it includes younger people as well as older people.





The most well established link between the gums and heart disease is related to bacterial endocarditis. This is a serious infection of the lining of the heart. It has long been known that anything that causes bleeding in the mouth can seed bacteria into the bloodstream. Normally these germs are cleaned out of the blood stream by white blood cells within a few minutes. But in some people with some types of pre-existing heart disease (usually valvular heart disease or prosthetic heart valves) there is a predisposition to having these bacteria latch on to the damaged heart tissue, causing this serious infection. For this reason, it is recommended that patients with these kinds of heart damage be placed on antibiotics prior to having any dental treatment that is likely to cause bleeding.





Your teeth and gums, it seems, speak volumes about your well-being. For starters, cavities and gum disease may point to diabetes or heart disease, and loose teeth could be a sign of osteoporosis.





Bleeding gums, dry mouth, fungal infections, cavities. These oral signs might clue your dentist into a serious health issue: diabetes. And these symptoms also might suggest other serious conditions, such as HIV and leukemia.





Diabetes and your mouth have blood sugar in common. If blood sugar levels are out of control in your body because you don't know you have diabetes, they're out of control in your mouth. With sugar to feed on, bacteria find a happy home in which to grow and thrive. The bacteria then attack the protective enamel layer on your teeth, and over time as the enamel breaks down, cavities develop which are one of the dental signs of diabetes.





Good question by the way.


Best wishes to you.





Click these links for interesting articles regarding this:


http://www.webmd.com/oral-health/oral-he...


http://www.dentistry.com/pbitesizeissues...


http://www.aarp.org/bulletin/yourhealth/...
Reply:At the cardiac rehab center, they put it bluntly,





FLOSS OR DIE.





The mouth is a direct access point of blood vessels that can take disease to the heart, through gum infections.
Reply:To be short and sweet the answer is under.


There is a definite correlation between tooth decay and CVS diseases, as bacterias and viruses dwell in a rotten tooth :


It is the Staphylococcus that causes diseases like:


Rheumatic fever involving the Mitral Valve and followed by involvements of other valves.


Rheumatic endocardititis.


Infections in holes in hearts (VSD; ASD) can lead to death.


Viral endocarditis.


Viral myocarditis.


Cardiac stroke has also been noted after tooth extraction.


There are many more examples and books written on this subject.


STD, AID as a cause of CHD have been acclaimed by researchers.


Hope answered your question.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

 
vc .net