| Columbia University Study Suggests That Brushing
Your Teeth May Reduce Your Risk of Stroke and Heart Attack |
Columbia University Medical Center Research
Illustrates Connection Between Periodontal Disease and Atherosclerosis
NEW YORK, NY, February 7, 2005 – A new study
by researchers at Columbia University Medical Center provides the
most direct evidence to date that preventing gum disease
could significantly improve your chances of avoiding vascular problems.
The study, which appears in the February 8 edition
of the American Heart Association’s publication Circulation,
shows that people with gum disease are more likely to suffer
from atherosclerosis – a narrowing of blood vessels
that can lead to stroke or heart attack.
Previous studies have suggested a relationship between
periodontal disease and vascular disease, but they have relied on
surrogate markers for periodontal disease, such as tooth loss or
pocket depth. This is the first study to examine the microbiology
of periodontal infection and positively connect it to atherosclerosis.
“This is the most direct evidence yet that
gum disease may lead to stroke or cardiovascular disease,”
said Moïse Desvarieux, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of
Epidemiology at Columbia University Medical Center’s Mailman
School of Public Health and lead author of the paper. “And
because gum infections are preventable and treatable, taking care
of your oral health could very well have a significant impact on
your cardiovascular health.”
Columbia researchers measured the bacteria levels
in the mouths of 657 people who had no history of stroke or myocardial
infarction. They also measured the thickness of the subjects’
carotid arteries – the artery that are measured to identify
atherosclerosis. The researchers found that people with a higher
level of the specific bacteria that causes periodontal disease also
had an increased carotid artery thickness, even after taking other
cardiovascular risk factors into account.
Desvarieux and his colleagues showed that in these
people, atherosclerosis is associated specifically with the type
of bacteria that causes periodontal disease, and not with other
oral bacteria. They confirmed this by assessing the levels of three
different groups of microbes – those that are known to cause
periodontal disease, those that are thought to possibly cause periodontal
disease, and those that are not connected to the disease. The relationship
between atherosclerosis and oral bacteria only existed for bacteria
causally related to periodontitis. The research is part of the NIH-
funded INVEST (Oral INfections and Vascular Disease Epidemiology
STudy) at Columbia University Medical Center and the University
of Minnesota and the NINDS-funded Northern Manhattan Study.
According to Dr. Desvarieux, one possible explanation
for the link is that the bacteria that cause the gum disease
may migrate throughout the body via the bloodstream and
stimulate the immune system, causing inflammation that results
in the clogging of arteries.
“It is important that we have shown an
association between specific periodontal pathogens and carotid artery
thickness that is unique and unrelated to other oral bacteria”,
said Panos N. Papapanou, D.D.S., Ph.D., professor and chair of the
Section of Oral and Diagnostic Sciences and director of the Division
of Periodontics, Columbia University School of Dental & Oral
Surgery, and a co-author on the study whose laboratory performed
the periodontal microbiological analysis.
“The measurement of carotid arteries thickness,
which has been shown to be a strong predictor of stroke and heart
attacks, was performed in our ultrasound lab without knowledge of
the subjects’ periodontal status to ensure an unbiased evaluation
of cardiovascular health,” said Ralph L. Sacco, M.D.,
M.S, associate chair of Neurology, professor of Neurology and Epidemiology,
and director of the Stroke and Critical Care Division of the Columbia
University College of Physicians and Surgeons and a co-author of
the study.
“This study is an example of the multidisciplinary
alliance of strong epidemiologic design and methods, microbiology
and imaging,” said Dr. Desvarieux, who is principal investigator
of the study. “We will continue to study these patients
to determine if atherosclerosis continues over time and is definitively
associated with periodontal disease.”
Also participating in the study were David Jacobs,
Ph.D. professor of Epidemiology at the University of Minnesota,
Tatjana Rundek, MD, and Bernadette Boden-Albala, assistant professors
of neurology at Columbia and Ryan Demmer, a doctoral student at
the University Of Minnesota who works with Dr. Desvarieux.
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