Women can escape heart disease, if they are regular to dentist
October 2nd, 2010 - 2:06 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Oct 2 (ANI): Women, who pay regular visits to dentist, can curb their visits to cardiac surgeon, as a new study states that if a woman takes proper dental care, she’s at reduced risk of heart attack and other cardiovascular problem by at least one-third.
The analysis compared people who went to the dentist during the previous two years with those who did not and used data from nearly 7,000 people ages 44-88 enrolled in the Health and Retirement Study,
However, researchers did not find a similar benefit for men.
“Many studies have found associations between dental care and cardiovascular disease, but our study is the first to show that general dental care leads to fewer heart attacks, strokes, and other adverse cardiovascular outcomes in a causal way,” said study lead author Timothy Brown, assistant adjunct professor of health policy and management at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health.
Data from the Health and Retirement Study had been collected every two years from 1996 to 2004.
This longitudinal study followed the same individuals over time, and each biennial survey included questions on whether subjects had visited the dentist and whether they had experienced a heart attack, stroke, angina or congestive heart failure during the prior two years.
The fact that men and women did not benefit equally from dental care did not completely surprise the researchers.
“We think the findings reflect differences in how men and women develop cardiovascular disease. Other studies suggest that estrogen has a protective effect against heart disease because it helps prevent the development of atherosclerosis. It’s not until women hit menopause around age 50 to 55 that they start catching up with men,” said Stephen Brown, study co-author.
The findings are published online in September end issue of the journal Health Economics. (ANI)
- Dentists can help determine your risk for heart attack - Nov 26, 2009
- Dentists can identify patients at risk of fatal heart attacks - Nov 06, 2009
- Key to get estrogen's benefits without cancer risk found - Jun 24, 2010
- Dentists can help identify patients at risk of heart attack - Nov 26, 2009
- Mother's stroke history 'can help predict daughter's heart attack risk' - Feb 02, 2011
- Heart attack risk higher for women whose mothers had strokes - Feb 02, 2011
- Apparently healthy, but risk of heart disease exists - Oct 25, 2011
- Early menopause 'doubles risk of heart attack, stroke' - Jun 22, 2010
- Depression linked to heart disease risk - Nov 13, 2011
- Wine's role ambiguous in protecting heart - Jan 31, 2012
- Sexually abused girl child more prone to stroke - Nov 14, 2011
- Odds of surviving heart attacks can be predicted - Jul 26, 2011
- Calcium supplements 'ups heart attack risk in older women' - Apr 20, 2011
- High and low dose aspirin can protect heart - Mar 27, 2012
- Dental cleanings reduce heart attack risk - Nov 14, 2011
Tags: assistant adjunct professor, biennial survey, cardiac surgeon, cardiovascular outcomes, congestive heart failure, dentist washington, general dental care, health economics, heart attack, heart attacks, heart failure, longitudinal study, proper dental care, public health data, retirement study, risk of heart attack, school of public health, study states, timothy brown, uc berkeley