The Silent Epidemic – Part 2
September 21, 2011
Last week we discussed the role and effect that diabetes has on oral health. It is not something that should be taken lightly. If you missed this column, please visit the website at the end of this column or e-mail me directly and I will send you a copy.
After reading last week’s column, it may seem frightening that there is no way out of the partnership of horrors between diabetes and severe gum disease. There are solutions. Just as poor oral health can compound a diabetic’s plight, proper oral health can come to the rescue.
Clinical studies confirm that treatment of gum disease reduces oral inflammation, which removes the factor that triggers the body’s inflammatory response which, in turn, plays a major role in compounding the effects of diabetes.
Dental treatments that fight gum infections also help improve control of blood sugar levels in diabetics.
If you are pre-diabetic, your dentist may actually be able to help prevent diabetes. If you already have diabetes, your dentist may be able to help you keep it under control, improve your quality of life and reduce the risk of premature death.
There’s even better news. It’s never too late to improve oral health care. Even if you already have severe gum disease or other dental problems, proper treatment can help stop it in its tracks. In many cases, dentists can even reverse the damage done to your teeth and gums as well as manage the metabolic elements of diabetes. And, if you haven’t yet developed any symptoms of diabetes-related oral health problems, your dentist can start a prevention program that will help you stay in control of your diabetes, maintain better health and enjoy a preferred quality of life.
Perhaps the best news is that this is something that doesn’t require exercise, taking a pill, giving yourself a shot of insulin, or sticking to a special diet. However, some or all of these things may be necessary to also help control diabetes. From an oral health perspective all you need to do is to start seeing your dentist and talking to him or her about your particular situation.
In the dental world there are going to be varying degrees of participation from dentists, depending on their knowledge or “philosophy” of care, when it comes to partnering with you to manage the oral health issues in regards to diabetes or pre-diabetes. Different dentists just practice differently. The best team approach is between the doctor, the patient and the dentist. If one of these team members does not participate, the battle cannot be won. Often times it is the patient who is not doing the things that he or she needs to do to properly manage the problem. If the dentist does not seem too concerned about your diabetes, you have the desire to have your oral health properly managed and are willing to do your part, find a new dentist.
The point is that this is a serious issue and if you, the patient, wants to take control of it, a team effort is needed.
The Silent Epidemic
February 8, 2011
With more than 24 million diabetics and 57 million pre-diabetics in the United States, nearly a quarter of the nation’s population, there are a lot of people affected by diabetes. The most up to date research shows the connection between dental health and diabetes has never been more critical.
As an indication of our general health, the rapidly rising rate of diabetes should be ringing alarm bells everywhere. The litany of health implications from diabetes is a long and grisly list. It is the sixth leading cause of death in the U.S. That is probably vastly understated because as many as 65% of deaths from diabetes are attributed to heart attack and stroke. People with diabetes have about twice the overall risk of death as those who don’t have the disease.
Complications from diabetes cuts years off productive lives and interfere with the quality of those lives through a host of debilitating health effects. Heart disease and stroke rates are as much as four times higher among diabetics. Nearly three-quarters of diabetics have high blood pressure. Each year, diabetes causes blindness in as many as 24,000 Americans. It is the leading cause of kidney failure, nervous system disease, amputations – the list goes on.
This isn’t meant to be a scare tactic. These are simply the facts and, yes, they are sobering. But if you have diabetes or are pre-diabetic, you may want to brace yourself. Because we are going to talk straight about oral health and diabetes, two diseases that can twist each other into a tight downward spiral of amplifying negative health effects. Unless they are halted by your physician and your dentist working in tandem as a health care team, together with your commitment to hold up your end of the bargain, these effects can continue to compound.
The facts about the connections between oral health and diabetes are even more alarming than those about diabetes alone. Here are just a few:
Diabetics are twice as likely to develop gum disease. This is especially true if your diabetes is not under control. The gum disease then worsens your diabetes through an automatic response that your uses to fight the infection.
People with gum disease are 270% more likely to suffer a heart attack than those with healthy gums.
People who have diabetes and sever gum disease have a premature death rate nearly eight times higher than those who do not have periodontal disease.
Those who have gum disease and diabetes together are more than three time likely to die of combined heart and kidney failure.
In people who have type 2 diabetes, gum disease is a predictor of end-stage kidney disease.
In people who have pre-diabetes – blood glucose levels that are higher than normal but not in the diabetic range – gum disease makes it more likely that they will become diabetic.
Once established in a person who has diabetes, the chronic infection that causes gum disease makes it more difficult to control diabetes, and increases damage and complications in blood vessel disease.