Posts Tagged ‘dentist’

Relevence of the Water Flosser

Thursday, August 30th, 2012

A review of the literature answers many questions related to the use of water flossers, the first of which was introduced in 1962. Numerous studies suggest that water flossers remove biofilm from tooth surfaces and bacteria from periodontal pockets better than string flossing and manual toothbrushing – together or alone. Dentists should review these findings and consider recommending water flossers for appropriate patients to improve their oral health.

Abstract above from “Compendium” magazine April 2012

If you have any questions or want to purchase a Waterpik waterflosser, please call our office.

What Is Gum Disease?

Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

Stories often appear in the news about the
association between oral health—specifically
gum disease—and overall health
conditions, such as diabetes or stroke.
But what is gum disease exactly?
WHAT CAUSES GUM DISEASE?
The condition you may refer to as “gum disease”
also is called “periodontal disease.” Periodontal
disease is an inflammation of the gums that, if
severe, can lead to the loss of the tissues that
hold your teeth in place. It is caused by plaque,
a sticky film of bacteria that forms constantly
on teeth. You can remove plaque by brushing
twice a day and cleaning between your teeth
daily. If plaque is not removed, it can cause your
gums (gingivae) to pull away from your teeth,
forming pockets in which more bacteria can collect.
Plaque that is not removed also hardens
into calculus along and under your gums. The
pockets and hard calculus make it difficult to
remove plaque without help from a dentist, and
periodontal disease can develop. If left un -
treated, periodontal disease can damage the tissues
that support your teeth, even the bone.
WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF I DEVELOP
PERIODONTAL DISEASE?
Symptoms of periodontal disease include
gums that are red and swollen and bleed
easily (for example, when you brush or clean
between your teeth);
gums that seem to have pulled away from
the teeth;
constant bad breath;
pus between your teeth and gums;
teeth that seem to be loose or moving away
from one another;
change in the way your teeth fit together
when you bite;
change in the way your partial dentures fit.
There are various stages to periodontal disease—
from gingivitis (early stage) to periodontitis
(advanced disease). Red and swollen gums
that bleed easily are a sign of gingivitis. At this
early stage, the disease may be reversed with a
professional cleaning and more regular daily
care at home. During the cleaning, the dentist
or dental hygienist will use a special tool to
scrape the hardened calculus and plaque from
along and beneath your gum line. More ad -
vanced forms of the disease require cleanings
that go more deeply below the gum line. Sometimes,
the dentist will refer you to a specialist—
a periodontist—for these cleanings.
HOW CAN I PREVENT PERIODONTAL
DISEASE?
To prevent periodontal disease:
brush your teeth twice a day;
clean between your teeth with floss or
another interdental cleaner once every day;
visit your dentist for a checkup and professional
cleaning regularly;
show your dentist or dental hygienist how
you brush and clean between your teeth and ask
if you can make any improvements.
If you smoke or chew tobacco, stop. Tobacco
use increases the risk of developing periodontal
disease.
Researchers have reported associations
between periodontal disease and a host of other
conditions. (Keep in mind that an association
does not mean that one disease causes the
other. It means that one disease or condition
tends to appear at the same time as the other.)
For example, studies have shown that people
with diabetes tend to have periodontal disease
more often than those without diabetes, and
often the disease is more severe than that in
other people. Researchers also have found that
some people with diabetes who receive treatment
for periodontal disease see improvements
in their ability to control blood sugar levels after
those treatments.1
So keep in mind that your daily oral health
routine and professional dental care are more
than just taking care of your teeth. They are
important steps in taking care of yourself. ?
Prepared by the American Dental Association (ADA) Division of
Science. Copyright © 2011 American Dental Association. Unlike
other portions of JADA, the print version of this page may be clipped
and photocopied as a handout for patients without reprint permission
from the ADA Publishing Division. Any other use, copying or
distribution of this material, whether in printed or electronic form
and including the copying and posting of this material on a Web site,
is strictly prohibited without prior written consent of the ADA Publishing
Division.
“For the Dental Patient” provides general information on dental
treatments to dental patients. It is designed to prompt discussion
between dentist and patient about treatment options and does not
substitute for the dentist’s professional assessment based on the
individual patient’s needs and desires.
1. Teeuw WJ, Gerdes VE, Loos BG. Effect of periodontal treatment
on glycemic control of diabetic patients: a systematic review and
meta-analysis. Diabetes Care 2010;33(2):421-427.

If you would like further information on preventing gum disease, please contact our office.

Inflammation key to understanding periodontal disease

Thursday, March 29th, 2012

By Nancy A. Melville, DrBicuspid.com contributing writer

February 15, 2012 — In the quest to better understand the causes of periodontal disease, researchers are making big strides on two key fronts: understanding the nature of the bacteria that stimulate gingival inflammation, and the genetic and physiologic foundations that can determine the body’s response to that stimulus.

As a common denominator for a broad range of medical conditions, inflammation has become an especially hot topic in periodontal research. Study after study has set out to try and understand why some people have an inflammatory response to certain bacteria and others don’t, according to Pamela McClain, DDS, president of the American Academy of Periodontology (AAP).

“Our understanding of periodontal disease is veering away from what was considered to be just bacteria causing the disease to the role of inflammation, which is believed to be the most important factor in the progression of the disease,” she explained. “That response can truly vary from one individual to the next. You can have a husband and wife with similar bacteria in their mouths — and studies show they commonly do — yet one gets inflammation and the other doesn’t. We know the bacteria start the process, but it’s the response to those bacteria that ultimately results in the loss of the attachment between the bone and the periodontal ligament.”

Genetic factors

Genetics is one of the most significant factors in that response. Genetic factors ranging from gender — more specifically, being female — to carrying some distinctive single nucleotide polymorphism are believed to play a role in 30% of periodontal disease cases. In two separate studies, Alexandre Vieira, DDS, PhD, and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh found evidence that genes could, in fact, account for as much as 50% of an individual’s susceptibility to developing caries or periodontitis.

In the first study, Dr. Vieira and colleagues in Pittsburgh and Brazil analyzed 389 individuals in 76 nuclear families and found an association between two variants of the gene FAM5C and periodontal disease (PLoS One, April 7, 2010, Vol. 5:4, p. e10053).

In the second study, published in the Journal of Dental Research (June 2010, Vol. 89:6, pp. 631-636), Dr. Vieira and his co-authors found that people with a variant of the gene DEFB1 (defensin, beta 1) were more than five times more likely to have decayed, missing, or filled teeth compared with those who didn’t carry the variant. Patients with another variant, the rs179946 (G-52A), were only a third as likely to have the dental problems (p = 0.014).

Interestingly, the FAM5C gene has also been associated with another inflammatory condition: heart disease.

“There are a number of common etiological factors modulating these diseases,” said Dr. Vieira, an associate professor and the director of clinical research at the University of Pittsburgh Center for Craniofacial and Dental Genetics. “It appears that the association between these two groups of diseases could be in part related to individual genetic background.”

The same genes modulate inflammation regardless of the process that is happening in the oral cavity or elsewhere, he added.

“Individual responses to specific external factors, since they are modulated by the same genes, can be similar, and this can partly explain associations reported between periodontal diseases and other systemic conditions,” he said.

Other experts agree that the discovery of similarities between the inflammatory process in periodontal disease and that of other chronic inflammatory diseases could represent one of the most promising areas of research.

“It is uncanny how the inflammatory reaction occurs in other chronic inflammatory diseases and periodontitis,” said Samuel Low, DDS, a past president of the AAP and a professor of periodontology at the University of Florida College of Dentistry. “With diabetes, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and rheumatoid arthritis, for instance, if you review the way the inflammatory process works in those diseases, it is very close to the way it works with periodontal disease.”

One important advantage that periodontal disease has over the other inflammatory conditions, Dr. McClain noted, is a clearly defined stimulus: bacteria.

“With rheumatoid arthritis, the body is attacking the joints with inflammation. Likewise with periodontal disease, the inflammation is in the attachment between the bone and the attachment of the gum tissue,” she said. “But at least with periodontal disease, we know the bacteria are stimulating this whole response. In rheumatoid arthritis or other conditions, we often don’t know.”

New bacteria insights

That being said, more headway is being made in understanding the behavior of the bacteria itself.

Intriguing new research on one of the most notorious of periodontal disease offenders, Porphyromonas gingivalis, implicates the bacterium as a “keystone pathogen” that, in fact, doesn’t directly cause damage, but instead manipulates the oral environment so that otherwise benign bacteria change course and infect the tooth’s supportive structures (Journal of Oral Biosciences, 2011, Vol. 53:3, pp. 233-240).

“In this regard, P. gingivalis’ tactics to undermine innate immunity may promote the survival of other members of the periodontal biofilm community,” wrote the study authors, from the University of Louisville School of Dentistry.

Based on observations on mice, the researchers found that P. gingivalis, in effect, reprograms the front-line immune cells that protect the space in the subgingival crevice, causing them to let down their defenses. Once that’s accomplished, benign bacteria — and not P. gingivalis — then rise in numbers and march in to infect the tooth’s periodontium.

“These subversive strategies of P. gingivalis may explain, at least in part, its ability to persist and establish chronic infections in the periodontium,” the authors wrote.

Interestingly, in a previous study, researchers with the University of Michigan found that people carrying an antibody to a protein of P. gingivalis, called HtpG, have a lower risk of periodontal disease (PLoS One, April, 23, 2008, Vol. 3:4, p. e1984).

The antibody “offers significant potential as an effective diagnostic target and vaccine candidate,” the authors concluded.

Nongenetic causes

Genetics holds plenty of clues to the causes of periodontal inflammation and disease, but it doesn’t paint the whole picture. Other well-known risk factors include everything from smoking to pregnancy (and the state of hormonal flux that it involves), but one key condition is looming ever larger as an important factor in periodontal disease: obesity.

Research demonstrating the role of being overweight and obesity in periodontal disease has mounted in recent years, with one of the more interesting studies coming out of the Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine

(Journal of Periodontology, October 20, 2011). The study authors found significant improvements in periodontal health among gastric bypass patients following their surgeries and weight loss.

The study included 30 obese people with chronic periodontitis. The researchers compared the participants before and after half of the subjects underwent bypass surgery and had fat cells removed from the abdomen. Compared with those who did not have the weight loss surgery, the bypass patients showed greater improvements in periodontal attachment, bleeding, probing depths, and plaque levels.

Importantly, the gastric bypass patients also showed declines in glucose levels following the procedure. The researchers theorized that by making insulin less resistant, weight loss improves diabetic status, which in turn improves response to periodontal treatment. They also speculated that the surgery reduced the production of the appetite hormone leptin, which has been implicated in the regulation of metabolism and may be linked to inflammation due to its role in increasing the production of cytokines and C-reactive protein.

Other studies also have shown evidence of weight loss resulting in reduced periodontal disease, and the combined research supports the suggestion of a relationship between the increased fat cells that occur with obesity and periodontal inflammation, Dr. Low said.

“Belly fat, interestingly enough, becomes an endocrine gland within itself, and with the increase of the fat cells, there is an overstimulation of the inflammatory process,” he said.

Dr. Low noted that diabetes is the second-highest risk factor for periodontal disease, behind smoking.

The relationship between the two diseases is believed to be somewhat reciprocal, with gingival inflammation undermining blood sugar control while diabetes-associated high blood sugar in turn may trigger periodontal inflammation. But the fact that obesity is a leading cause of diabetes would appear to further compound the damage the disease can wage on periodontal tissue.

Prescription drugs

Other known culprits in the development of periodontal disease are medications. Prescription drugs known to potentially cause gingival ulcerations include aantihypertensive drugs, calcium channel blockers, and even some anti-inflammatories.

Some of the newer offenders include certain chemotherapy drugs, antidepressants, and antianxiety medications, which can all cause xerostomia, according to Dr. Low.

“There are probably more than 500 medications out there that create dry mouth,” he said. “Antidepressants and antianxiety medications, for instance, can cause this, and the danger is that saliva is one of the best protectors against inflammation. It contains powerful anti-inflammatory products. So if you don’t have saliva, you lose your natural defense system.”

Certain medications can cause swelling of the gum tissues and result in pseudo or false pockets, making it easier for the disease to progress, Dr. Low added.

Xerostomia resulting from medications can trigger a particularly vicious cycle of erosion on the teeth and gums, Dr. McClain emphasized.

“When you have less saliva being produced, you’re not washing away the bacteria or having the good enzymes that are necessary to fight the bacteria,” she said. “That results in more plaque formation and a bigger challenge in managing periodontal issues.”

Dental practitioners should stay informed of data on new drugs and new drug classes in the marketplace, Dr. McClain added. “We often don’t know the effects of these medications on the teeth or gums until patients have been on them for a long time,” she said.

The issue is tricky, however — some medications may clearly be essential in treating a patient’s medical condition, and Dr. Low warned dentists to use caution in advising patients on their prescription drugs.

“We recommend that dentists tell patients to ask their physician if there is an alternative medication if the current medication they are taking is risking periodontal health,” he said. “If the patient’s doctor says the condition is life-threatening and there is only one drug, then we’ll deal with the dry mouth. But if we find that the dry mouth is contributing to either decay or periodontal disease, then it’s important to see if there is an alternative.”

Fatty acids: Bad and good

Aside from medications, the causes of periodontal disease may also simply lie in the foods patients consume. When it comes to the causes of inflammation, recent research has revolved around fatty acids, both bad and good.

Not surprisingly, many of the same fatty acids implicated in increasing bad cholesterol levels and potentially raising the risk of cardiovascular disease have been linked to periodontal disease.

In one recent study out of Japan, for instance, older nonsmokers who consumed higher levels of saturated fatty acids, including those found in meat fats, milk, butter, lard, and some oils, had a relative risk of periodontal disease that was 1.92 times higher than that of people of the same age with a low saturated fatty acid intake (Journal of Dental Research, July 2011, Vol. 90:7, pp. 861-867).

Conversely, just as polyunsaturated fats, including docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), are associated with a host of health benefits, ranging from cardiovascular to neurological, so too are the fats emerging as potential key players in the prevention of inflammation and disease.

One recent study involving more than 9,000 adults showed the prevalence of periodontitis to be approximately 20% lower among individuals who reported consuming the highest amount of dietary DHA; reduction, although smaller, was also seen with consumption of EPA (Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, November 2010, Vol. 110:11, pp. 1650-1652).

“We found that omega-3 fatty acid intake, particularly DHA and EPA, are inversely associated with periodontitis in the U.S. population,” stated co-author Asghar Naqvi, MD, MPH, from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, in a press release. “To date, the treatment of periodontitis has primarily involved mechanical cleaning and local antibiotic application. Thus, a dietary therapy, if effective, might be a less expensive and safer method for the prevention and treatment of periodontitis.”

Another line of research on omega-3s adds that the inclusion of low-dose aspirin (81 mg) significantly improves the ability of omega-3 fatty acid supplementation to resolve inflammation.

In one study of 80 human subjects, including 40 who received scaling and root planing and 40 who also received the treatment in addition to supplementation with low-dose aspirin and omega-3 fatty acid (900 mg of EPA and DHA), significant reductions in probing depths and attachment gain were observed after three and six months in the supplementation group, compared with the control group (Journal of Periodontology, November 2010, Vol. 81:11, pp. 1635-1643).

“Omega-3- and omega-6-based polyunsaturated fatty acids play a major role as defense-supporting/catalyzing lipids. The problem is that humans (and many mammals) do not have the means to metabolize these lipids and cannot produce them in sufficient quantities,” said Alpdogan Kantarci, DDS, PhD, of the Forsyth Institute and co-author on several key studies examining the issue. “What we produce is very limited, and their half-lives are very short. Therefore, we need to consume external sources such as fish or plants.”

Aspirin prolongs the half-life of such compounds in blood and dampens the inflammatory reactions by counteracting the mediators and cells that are produced as the first line of defense against pathogens, he added.

“The more we appreciate these mechanisms, the more targeted our treatment would become in inflammatory diseases, including the periodontal diseases,” he said.

In a previous study on mice and rabbits (Journal of Immunology, November 15, 2007, Vol. 179:10, pp. 7021-7029), the researchers even found that omega-3 benefits appeared to extend to the bones, Dr. Kantarci said.

“We have shown that such an approach cannot only reverse the inflammatory process, but also can help in regenerating the lost bone and hard tissues, so there is a lot of exciting potential,” he said.
“Research has demonstrated that supplementation of 900 mg of omega-3 and 81 mg of aspirin can decrease periodontal disease.”
– Samuel Low, DDS

As more becomes known about the mechanism of omega-3 fatty acids, the more valuable they may become as a nonpharmaceutical approach in the prevention or treatment of inflammatory diseases, including periodontal disease.

“This does not mean that the antibiotics will be replaced soon, since many infections will most probably still require elimination or decrease of bacterial load,” Dr. Kantarci said. “But in complex infecto-inflammatory diseases, modulation of the host response can provide novel ways to control and treat the process.”

Dr. Low already recommends that his patients at risk for periodontal disease take omega-3 supplements — and low-dose aspirin.

“We’re very excited about this because research has demonstrated that supplementation of 900 mg of omega-3 and 81 mg of aspirin can decrease periodontal disease,” he said. “The omega-3s basically suppress bad inflammation and express good inflammation. We can also throw in calcium and vitamin D for the bones, but to me the more appropriate approach is anything that is anti-inflammatory.”

Looking ahead

The periodontal community can likely expect to see much more intriguing research as the secrets of chronic inflammatory diseases unfold. Dr. Low recommends dentists simply stay tuned and follow the science.

“What we don’t want to see is dentists falling back on anecdotal data,” he cautioned. “The ‘I’ve seen patients for 25 years and when I’ve seen this, I do that’ approach is just not wise at this point in time. What we want is an approach that respects the scientific relationship between the risk factors, the genetic factors, and the progression of the disease.”

Big Downsides to Super-Sized Meals

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

You usually watch your diet. But today you’re at a wedding, overindulging in fatty and caloric foods. Can one super-sized meal hurt? It might, recent research has found.

Large fatty meals can have a variety of immediate adverse effects, which are most risky if you already have heart disease or risk factors for it. Here are five troubles you may experience from just one splurge:

• Stiffer arteries, reduced blood flow. Large high-fat meals can impair the ability of blood vessels to dilate or expand when necessary. That helps explain why people who have cardiovascular disease and who eat a large meal and then exercise sometimes get angina or even a heart attack. Digesting any kind of large meal also causes your heart rate to increase because of the increased demands from the digestive tract.

• Higher blood pressure. A super-sized meal can trigger the re­­lease of norepinephrine, a stress hormone that can raise blood pressure and heart rate.

• High triglycerides. Any meal will raise levels of these fats in the blood, but after a large meal (especially one rich in fat or refined carbohydrates) levels rise the most and can remain elevated for six to twelve hours. Accompany the food with alcohol, and triglycerides will rise even more.

• Blood sugar effects. If you have diabetes, a super-sized meal can impair your body’s ability to process glucose.

• Heartburn. If you are prone to heartburn, the larger the meal, the more gastric reflux you’re likely to have.

Antidotes to super-sized meals?

Years ago, a small study found that taking high doses of vitamin C and E right before a high-fat meal helped maintain arterial blood flow. But it has never been shown that these or any other antioxidants can protect your heart in the short term or long term. Another small study found that when young healthy people walked briskly for 45 minutes after eating a large fatty meal (almost 1,000 calories), the exercise helped restore their arteries’ ability to dilate. Still, exercise won’t cancel out all the bad effects of overeating. In addition, the same effects may not occur in older or less healthy people; for them, exercise after a heavy meal may first cause problems.

Words to the wise: If you’re healthy, overindulging occasionally shouldn’t be a problem. But if you have undesirable cholesterol levels, high blood pressure, diabetes, or pre-existing heart disease, or if you are very overweight or smoke, super-sized meals are a bad idea. At parties and family gatherings, don’t arrive ravenous, and don’t hover near the buffet. Eat slowly, since it takes time for your body to signal your brain that you’re full. Eat lots of filling foods with a high water content, such as salads, soups, fruits, and vegetables. And it can’t hurt to take that after-dinner walk.

Article from Berkeley Wellness Alerts
Proper nutrition is important for your oral health and your overall health. Please call or email us with any questions or concerns about how to achieve proper dental health.