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DENTAL NEWS ARCHIVES 165 |
Oral Hygiene May Help More Than Teeth and GumsBy SUSAN
GILBERT Your dental health may be a sign not only of how
diligently you brush and floss but also of your risk of stroke and
heart disease. A number of studies have indicated a relationship between
periodontal disease and a heightened risk of developing problems
with the heart or circulatory system. But pinning down those
suspicions has proved difficult. Now a new study has provided what
several experts called the most solid evidence yet. The study found that older adults who had lost 10 to 19 teeth
were more likely than those who had lost fewer teeth to have a major
risk factor for stroke — plaque clogging the main arteries to the
brain. A leading theory for the connection between the teeth and the
arteries is that periodontal disease, a bacterial infection of the
gums, may start a cascade of chemical events that cause inflammation
throughout the body. Chronic inflammation in the arteries is thought to contribute to
atherosclerosis, a narrowing of blood vessels that can lead to
stroke or heart attack. "The underlying hypothesis is that chronic inflammation
contributes to coronary artery disease," said Dr. Ann Bolger, an
associate professor of medicine at the University of California at
San Francisco and a spokeswoman for the American Heart Association,
which is publishing the new study in the September issue of Stroke,
one of its journals. The new study followed 711 people ranging in age from about 57 to
75 who had no history of stroke or heart attack. The researchers
scanned their carotid arteries, the major blood vessels on either
side of the neck, for evidence of atherosclerosis, and examined
their teeth and gums. The researchers looked for signs of periodontal disease by such
conventional measures as plaque on the teeth and pockets between the
teeth and gums. They also counted the number of teeth each person
had and considered tooth loss to be an indicator of past periodontal
disease. "People lose teeth due to dental caries and periodontal disease,"
said Dr. Panos N. Papapanou, director of the division of
periodontics at Columbia University School of Dental and Oral
Surgery and a researcher on the study. "The theory is that the older
you are, the more teeth are lost for periodontal reasons." The study found that the people with the most missing teeth had
the most severe periodontal disease, but missing teeth correlated
with carotid artery plaque only up to a point. The prevalence of carotid artery plaque was lowest — 44 percent,
on average — among the people who were missing 9 or fewer teeth. By
contrast, the prevalence of carotid artery plaque was 61 percent, on
average, among the people who were missing 10 to 19 teeth. But the
prevalence was 57 percent among people with 20 to 31 missing
teeth. Dr. Moise Desvarieux, the lead author of the study, said he did
not know why the incidence of carotid artery plaque leveled off in
people who had lost 20 or more teeth. "If you have very few teeth left, it may be that the tooth loss
is not related to periodontal disease but to something else," said
Dr. Desvarieux, an assistant professor of epidemiology and medicine
at the University of Minnesota. One of the difficulties in studying the relationship between gum
disease and coronary artery disease is that the two conditions share
many risk factors, like smoking, diabetes and high blood
pressure. An unanswered question has been whether these other risk factors
account for most or all of the association previously seen between
gum disease and coronary artery disease. But when the new study
controlled for these risk factors, it still found that carotid
artery plaque was most common in people who had lost 10 to 19
teeth. A weakness of the study is that it did not find a correlation
between periodontal disease itself and the incidence of carotid
artery plaque, said Dr. Kaumudi J. Joshipura, an associate professor
of oral health policy and epidemiology at the Harvard School of
Dental Medicine. "It's not clear what to make of the fact that tooth loss was
associated with carotid artery plaque and periodontal disease was
not," said Dr. Joshipura, who published a study in January that
showed an association between tooth loss, periodontal disease and
stroke in 41,380 men who participated in the Health Professionals
Follow-Up Study, a continuing health research project. No study has shown that gum disease or tooth loss actually causes
stroke, heart disease or atherosclerosis. But Dr. Desvarieux and his
colleagues will continue following the people in their study over
the next three years to see if they can find a cause-and-effect
relationship. "We will compare people with higher versus lower incidence and
look at the progression of carotid artery thickness and the
incidence of heart attacks and strokes," Dr. Desvarieux said. "We
will also look at the microbiology and inflammation locally and in
the blood." An important chemical that they will look for in the blood is
C-reactive protein, a byproduct of inflammation, which in elevated
levels indicates an increased risk of heart attack. The long-term goal is to see if people can protect their hearts
and their brains by taking good care of their teeth. "One of the advantages of looking at gum infections is that
they're preventable and treatable," Dr. Desvarieux said.
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