Need another reason to start losing any extra pounds you may be carrying? Here’s one… Obese men, besides the extra weight, also carry a higher risk for painful, potentially dangerous gum problems than normal weight adults according to new research.
You’ve probably heard of the milder, more reversible form of gum disease – gingivitis, where only the gums are affected. Left untreated, this can progress to periodontitis where bacteria in the plaque irritate gums and provoke an inflammatory response that can be quite destructive.
As a silently progressing condition, periodontal disease often doesn’t show symptoms until it has gotten a firm foothold in your mouth.
In this latest work, researchers looked at data for nearly 37,000 men who were part of the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS) that began in 1986.
The program is designed to compliment the all-female Nurses’ Health Study and looks at the relationship between nutritional factors and the incidence of serious diseases like cancer, heart disease and vascular problems.
Lots of effort has already gone into determining the risk between gum disease and cardiovascular risk.
To see if there might be a connection between periodontal disease and obesity, the team analyzed data spanning 16 years for the subjects, all of whom were free of gum disease at the start of the study.
Data on height, weight, waist/hip measurements was collected as well as self-reported gum disease. Using the standard definition of obesity, a BMI of 30 of higher, Monik Jimenez, a doctoral candidate at the Harvard School of Public Health, found that obesity brought an increased risk of periodontal disease.
Jimenez will present the findings at the 2009 International Association for Dental Research general session in Miami Beach.
Not only higher BMI’s, but waist circumferences were also linked by this study to a higher risk of gum disease. A waist measurement of 40 inches or more, considered a risk for heart disease, upped the risk of gum disease by 19% as compared to those with measurements under the 40-inch mark.
“Obesity was associated with a 29 percent increased risk of periodontal disease over the course of the study.” Jimenez said.
There was a small increase in risk of periodontal disease for those who were overweight, but not obese. This hardly compared to the risk for those carrying a lot of extra weight.
In a related work, Jimenez and colleagues at the University of Puerto Rico found that a higher waist-hip ratio (WHR) was tied to a higher risk of moderately severe gum disease in both men and women over 70 years old.
In women, an elevated waist-to-hip ratio is .88 or above; for men it’s .95 or higher. Here’s how the calculation is made, a woman with a 36-inch waist and 40-inch hips has a WHR of .90 (36/40 = .90). Subjects with elevated waist-to-hip ratios were almost 6 times more likely to have periodontal disease.
This work builds on earlier studies that associate gum disease with heart disease, as well as gum disease and cancer risk in males. Gum disease for diabetics is also known to be worse.
Continues below…
*Highly Recommended*
This Doctor Dropped 10 Sizes – Discover Her Shocking Secret
There’s an overwhelming body of research that shows most diets aren’t effective in the long term because they work AGAINST the body…
In fact most people who diet end up putting ON more weight than when they started.
It’s because most diets deprive you of the foods you enjoy, stop you getting the nutrients you need…basically forcing your body into ’starvation mode’…
Joy Siegrist MD developed a diet that works WITH your body…one that has a 96% success rate.
And to prove it she used it to drop 10 dress sizes.
Click through now to discover how Dr Joy dropped 10 dress sizes…
Obese Adults Have Higher Risk Of Gum Disease continued…
Concerned for your own gums?
Your own health?
A good approach to keeping your mouth healthy is to choose a heart healthy diet that’s also beneficial for your gums, brush and clean between your teeth several times each day, and don’t put off regular dental checkups.
Caught early, periodontal disease can be treated – so you don’t have to lose a tooth.
You might also want to consider the online risk assessment tools available to find out where you stand today. If you have symptoms of gum problems such as persistent swollen, red or bleeding gums, tooth sensitivity or bad breath, a visit to your dentist is in order to keep your mouth, and your whole body, healthy.
To your good health,
Kirsten Whittaker
Daily Health Bulletin Editor











































