Research Paper On Gum Disease

1122 Words3 Pages

Gum Disease

Periodontal disease is a common infection in adults. Periodontal disease progresses with age, as more people live longer, the disease will only increase in the next decade. About 50% of the population has some form of gingivitis, 30% have periodontitis, and 3-4% will have an aggressive form of the disease. In the past 30 years, it has been found that periodontal disease is chronic; it has been linked to number of specific types of species such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, Bateroides forsythus, and Treponema denticola. Improving gum health can be done by debridement and reducing the amount of anaerobes in the dental plaque. There are two ways that patients and clinicians can treat such a disease either by debridement by a Dental …show more content…

This pocket ranges from 4 to 12 mm and depending on the severity of the progression, can have anywhere from 10 million to 1 billion bacterial cells. Often enough, the patient tends to ignore the bleeding and loss of attachment because it is regularly painless. Most of the time, patients normally get told for the first time by their dentist when their measurements are more then 4mm deep. In an edentulous mouth, relating to periodontal disease, it has been showen that there are higher levels of C-reactive proteins, which are produced by the liver. C-reactive proteins levels were similar to chronic bronchitis and cigarette smoking and were stronger for individuals with no risk …show more content…

In humans, the change is unidentified. It has been found in animals by placing a silk ligature around the teeth in dogs or monkeys. A similar response in humans may occur when food is retained in between the teeth or when a improper restored tooth is poorly done, resulting in an overhang where bacteria can grow excessively at the junction of the tooth surface. When amalgam restorations were placed, it was shown that an increase in both spirochetes and black-pigmented Prevotella and Porphyromonas species amplified in the adjacent plaque and bleeding in the gingiva was witnessed. In conclusion, the overgrowth of bacteria in dental plaque can be easily suppressed by mechanical debridement and that centuries of dental teachings have taught that periodontal disease results from a yuck mouth. The next step lies that periodontal disease is an infection but taking the necessary steps in implementing treatment procedures that it isn’t a infection hypothetically. The antimicrobial treatment of periodontal infections will be of value from studies that show periodontal disease is related to stroke and cardiovascular disease. Overtime, if an antimicrobial treatment is just as effective in giving back a person’s oral hygiene back to normal, this would give

cardiac and stroke patients seeking to improve the patients periodontal condition to reduce or delay future cardiovascular

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