Women, keep those toothbrushes and dental floss handy. A comprehensive review of
women's health studies by Charlene Krejci, associate clinical professor at the
Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine, has shown a link
between women's health issues and gum disease.
Across the ages, hormonal
changes take place during puberty, menstruation, pregnancy and menopause. Krejci found female hormones that
fluctuate throughout women's lives can change conditions in the mouth that allow
bacteria to grow, enter the blood, and exacerbate certain health issues like
bone loss, fetal death and pre-term births.
Her overview of the
literature was reported in the article, "Women's Health: Periodontitis and its
Relation to Hormonal Changes, Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes and Osteoporosis" in
the May issue of Oral Health and Preventive Dentistry.
The Case
Western Reserve University periodontist reviewed 61 journal articles with nearly
100 studies for a collective answer on whether hormones have a relationship to
gum disease and specific women's health issues like preterm labor, bone loss,
and the side effect of hormonal replacement therapy.
"There's definitely
a gender-specific connection between women's hormones, gum disease, and specific
health issues impacting women," Krejci said.
"Although women tend to
take better care of their oral health than men, the main message is women need
to be even more vigilant about maintaining healthy teeth and gums to prevent or
lessen the severity of some of women-specific health issues," Krejci said.
In addition to the brushing and flossing daily regimen, Krejci
recommends visiting the dentist at least every six months, and more if there are
any gum problems found or women suffer from bone loss or are pregnant.
She added that it is widely known that hormones cause some women gum
problems during pregnancy. Women already susceptible to gum disease before being
pregnant, she advises, need to make sure that these oral problems are treated.
Although women were once discouraged from seeing the dentist while
pregnant, she said that scaling and planing of the roots of teeth to eliminate
some gum disease is now recommended during pregnancy for women. Severe gum
disease requiring surgery is still generally postponed until after the baby's
birth.
Gum disease begins with the build up of bacterial plaque on the
teeth and under the gums. Untreated it can cause irritation and inflammation during which harmful and toxic
byproducts are released. These toxins erode the bone that anchors teeth and
cause breaks and bleeding in the gums
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