tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-84854663034885590872024-03-13T23:03:21.001-07:00Los Gatos Dental GroupDr. Gregory Sawyer is a well-known educator, lecturer, and practicing dentist based in the Northern California Bay Area. To learn more about Dr. Sawyer and his dental practice, visit <a href="http://www.losgatosdentalgroup.com">www.losgatosdentalgroup.com</a>.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-11491826777415386162010-09-29T19:20:00.000-07:002010-09-29T19:22:06.911-07:00Minimally Invasive Cosmetic Dentistry<p class="p1"><b>What Cosmetic Dentists Don’t Want You to Know About Veneers</b></p> <p class="p2"><span class="s1"></span><br /></p> <p class="p4"><span class="s1">I saw a thirty-something man in my office last week with a cosmetic emergency. One of his veneers had fractured off of a front tooth. For somebody whose job involves meeting the public, this was a rather embarrassing situation. He had the broken piece, so we were able to bond it back temporarily and get him to his meeting on time. </span></p> <p class="p2"><span class="s1"></span><br /></p> <p class="p4"><span class="s1">What got my attention was a question that he asked me: How long are veneers supposed to last? When somebody asks me how long certain dentistry will last, I have usually asked how long their car would last. After all, your car will fail quickly if it runs out of oil. And it will last a long time if you take good care of it and get it serviced regularly. And most of the dental repairs we do are similar in life expectancy. If you have great oral hygiene, and see your dentist and hygienist regularly, your dentistry will last a long time. </span></p> <p class="p2"><span class="s1"></span><br /></p> <p class="p4"><span class="s1">But one of my favorite dental school professors, Dr Roger Riley, used to tell us that “there was nothing we could do for them that was as good as what God gave them, and they had already screwed that up”</span></p> <p class="p2"><span class="s1"></span><br /></p> <p class="p4"><span class="s1">But the underlying question behind his how long will they last question, was really: How much will this cost me to maintain for the rest of my life? Is it possible that those veneers that cost me about $1000 each eleven years ago will wind up costing me $10,000 each or more to keep them nice during my lifetime? Would he have made the same decision if he understood that was a likelihood?</span></p> <p class="p2"><span class="s1"></span><br /></p> <p class="p4"><span class="s1">But what about elective cosmetic dentistry like veneers? Most people realize that is unrealistic for repairs to their teeth to last longer than the teeth had lasted before they needed repairing. People intuitively realize that Dr. Riley was right. But what about the longevity of an elective procedure? The teeth he had veneered had perhaps had nothing more wrong with them than being stained, crooked, or mis-shaped. He had not realized that the veneers would need to be replaced many times in his lifetime at the time he made the decision to have the teeth veneered. </span></p> <p class="p2"><span class="s1"></span><br /></p> <p class="p4"><span class="s1">What if he had another choice to improve his smile? Today, in many cases we can use short term orthodontics to straighten your front teeth in less than six months, whiten them by many shades with our exciting new whitening protocol, and do a minor reshaping of the teeth to get a great smile that does not need periodic replacement for the rest of your life. Even if it cost more (it does not), wouldn’t that be a more reasonable choice in the long run?</span></p> <p class="p2"><span class="s1"></span><br /></p> <p class="p4"><span class="s1">We at Los Gatos Dental Group take our minimally invasive philosophy seriously. We can even extend our philosophy to include some elective cosmetic procedures.</span></p>Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-74367355192916630382010-05-15T23:14:00.000-07:002010-05-15T23:36:29.202-07:00X-rays in 3D?Now that we have all seen the movie Avatar in 3D, some of us more than once if you believe the attendance figures, let me tell you how we use 3D imaging in dentistry. We have recently installed a cone beam 3D X-ray machine at Los Gatos Dental Group.<br /><br />I admit that our motivation was primarily to make implant placement safer and more predictable. But what I have seen in six weeks of reading the 3D X-rays that we have taken has convinced me that we should be imaging everybody in 3D, not just implant patients.<br /><br />Take this case, a young woman who has had multiple visits to her physician complaining of sinus congestion. She has been repeatedly treated for sinus infections and other presumably allergy related symptoms to little avail.<br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_yFb60UgolNI/S--Q_vr-2II/AAAAAAAAABQ/ivJCEgnXniQ/s1600/VB%233PXL.jpg"><img style="float: left; margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 320px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_yFb60UgolNI/S--Q_vr-2II/AAAAAAAAABQ/ivJCEgnXniQ/s320/VB%233PXL.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5471751497085540482" border="0" /></a><br />This is an X-ray, that is at right angles to the traditional X-ray, and which has been generated by our 3D X-ray machine. At the left end of the yellow line is an abscess, at the end of a root canal treated tooth, that has invaded the sinus. The cause of her sinus infection is this abscess, which is not visible on the traditional 2D X-ray, because the darkness is hidden by dense bone both in front of and behind, as well as the root of the tooth. The tooth doesn’t hurt, so nobody has connected the repeat infections with a tooth.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_yFb60UgolNI/S--Pe9_DArI/AAAAAAAAABA/3B8_kGgcE8M/s1600/VB1%2314PXL.jpg"><img style="float: left; margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; cursor: pointer; width: 325px; height: 317px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_yFb60UgolNI/S--Pe9_DArI/AAAAAAAAABA/3B8_kGgcE8M/s400/VB1%2314PXL.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5471749834476290738" border="0" /></a>The next image is another at right angles to the traditional X-ray. What you see at the end of the yellow line is another abscess at the apex of a root canal treated tooth. This tooth is also asymptomatic, so far. The abscess has just broken through the palatal plate of bone and is progressing towards the palate. Left untreated, this will likely begin to swell and hurt in the roof of her mouth. By diagnosing this sooner by 3D X-ray, instead of later by 2D X-ray, we have prevented pain and swelling.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Now that I have been able to make these and other diagnoses by 3D, I can’t imagine going back to 2 dimensional radiography. But we are finding other uses for the images created by 3D radiography.<br /><br />I have been able to identify places where extra nerves enter the lower jaw. These extra nerves can innervate teeth in ways that dentists were not taught to numb. Most of the people who have these extra nerves to teeth are terrified, because dentists have not believed them when they have said that the tooth wasn’t numb. After all, we were taught in dental school that if your lip is numb, your lower teeth on that side are numb. I have long suspected the existence of these nerves, but I have had to find them by trial and error. SInce I have been sedating anxious patients my entire career, I have seen more than my share of people with this anatomical difference. Now I can see this before the tooth doesn’t get numb with the usual anesthetic technique.<br /><br />I spent last weekend in Florida studying the Poly Jaw Replicator. This instrument takes measurements in 3D from these X-rays to a jaw simulator, that is the first instrument to truly reproduce the actual jaw movements to such accuracy. The benefit will be comfortable crowns and bridges with little or no adjustment. The amount of time it will take to deliver complete mouth dentistry will be dramatically reduced, and the need for another visit to finalize the bite, when you are not numb, will vanish.<br /><br /><br />As these instruments become more widely accepted by dentists, their price will come down. I predict that most dentists will be using 3D radiography within ten years, as it becomes the standard of practice. The public will demand more complete and earlier diagnosis.<br /><br /><br /><br /><img src="file:///Users/macpro/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/moz-screenshot-5.png" alt="" /><img src="file:///Users/macpro/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/moz-screenshot-6.png" alt="" /><br /><br /><img src="file:///Users/macpro/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/moz-screenshot.png" alt="" /><img src="file:///Users/macpro/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/moz-screenshot-1.png" alt="" /><img src="file:///Users/macpro/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/moz-screenshot-2.png" alt="" /><img src="file:///Users/macpro/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/moz-screenshot-3.png" alt="" /><img src="file:///Users/macpro/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/moz-screenshot-4.png" alt="" />Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-85520545390552003902010-02-06T07:23:00.000-08:002010-02-07T20:06:54.699-08:00The Cost of NeglectI have been thinking recently about the cost of neglect. This post is prompted by my recent examination of a 46 year old woman who has lost a root canal treated upper first premolar to biomechanical failure. That is not an uncommon occurrence in my implant practice. I would say that at least half of the implants that I place are replacing teeth lost to fracture or infection subsequent to root canal treatment.<br /><br />When we were taught root canals in dental school, there was a sense that we had saved that tooth forever. That is just not true. I have been hunting for research statistics to verify my observation that 20 years is about the norm for root canal success. When we perform a root canal, we remove not only the nerve of the tooth, but also the blood supply. In time, these teeth become brittle and less capable of handling the normal chewing forces, and they fracture off at or near the gum line.<br /><br />What got my attention for this woman, was that she had one three tooth bridge in the lower right, to replace a lost root canal treated tooth. And she had ten other root canal treated teeth. She has over $20,000 invested in her mouth, in various stages of failure. She is waiting for her income tax refund to replace the one premolar fractured now. I asked if she realized that, at her age, she was likely to lose all of the rest of the root filled teeth before she dies. A little arithmetic stunned her at the cost of the implants she would be needing. In today’s dollars, she will be facing over $40,000 in implant replacement. That is a lot of tax refunds.<br /><br />In today’s economy, some people are delaying visits to the dentist because they are not having pain. Is it not obvious what a false economy that really is? The delay of the diagnosis of tooth decay often results in pain, as the decay progresses undiagnosed and untreated. For avoiding the dentist to save some money, the problem has progressed from the need for a filling at around $200, to the need for a root canal and crown for over $2000. That is bad enough, but that root canal tooth is likely to be lost twenty years down the line, requiring an implant at double that cost. Now for the delay, the cost has multiplied 3000%.<br /><br />But what makes this even worse is the reality that all of this destruction is entirely preventable. By treating the causes of the decay in the first place, transmissible bacteria and low pH, we could prevent most or all of that destruction.<br /><br />The cost of dental neglect is far higher than any other means of budget cutting.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-19329332886931308232010-02-01T20:49:00.000-08:002010-02-01T20:54:09.392-08:00Periodontal Disease and Pregnancy, a New RiskA researcher from Department of Periodontics at Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine, reported the first documented link between a mother with pregnancy-associated gum disease to the death of her fetus.<br />The link was discovered when a friend of the mother of the stillborn baby introduced her to the researcher, Yiping Han. Han was studying the bacteria, Fusobacterium nucleatum, and it’s relationship to pre-term labor and stillbirths.<br /><br />This study caught my eye because F Nucleatum is one of the known periodontal pathogens that we test for using DNA-PCR, when we find menacing bacteria from the gums when we look under the microscope.<br /><br />The mother gave a history of bleeding gums during the pregnancy. Bleeding gums during pregnancy are not uncommon, indeed around 75% of pregnant women experience bleeding gums.<br /><br />Postmortem microbial studies of the baby found the presence of F. nucleatum in the lungs and stomach. The baby had died from a septic infection and inflammation caused by bacteria. The bacteria was also found in the mother’s mouth.<br />It is now well understood that oral bacteria can make their way into the bloodstream through the bleeding gums. We are just now beginning to realize the extent of the potential for problems in other organs systems. And too many people still accept bleeding gums as normal. Bleeding gums are dangerous. <br /><br />WIth the numbers of people with gum disease, 50% over age 30, and the delaying of childbirth by so many women, we need to be more diligent in our explanations of the need for good oral health to pregnant or potentially pregnant women.<br /><br />And as I continue to remind all involved, the old paradigm of mechanical debridement, is just not enough to cure an existing bacterial infection. Brushing and flossing helps, but once you are infected, it is just not enough.<br /><br />There is a happy ending to the story. The mother has had periodontal therapy and has now given birth to a healthy baby<br /><br />The findings are discussed in the February issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-31832088856161322822010-01-24T11:23:00.000-08:002010-01-24T11:28:42.426-08:00I have had an epiphany. While I admit to recognizing that diet is important to health any many ways, I have been influenced by Dr. Dean Edell to resist dietary supplementation by pills. Dr. Edell is in a position to read more of the medical literature than any doctor who actually sees patients, so I credit him with being able to keep up with all the latest research. And he seems to be honest in his advice, so I tend to trust his advice to his listeners.<br /><br />But now I think he is wrong about nutritional supplements, like vitamins. His reasoning is that he is healthy and personally doesn’t take supplements. It is likely that he is correct in assessing his own needs. <br /><br />This week I attended a conference on the oral-systemic connection in Reno, where I shared the podium with Dr Lisa Marie Samaha, Dr, Lee Ostler, and Dr. Bill Domb, and Robert Maccario. Dr. Samaha presented case after case of people whose periodontal disease was helped greatly by nutritional supplementation. They still needed treatment to reach optimum periodontal health, but the improvement was unmistakable from the nutritional supplements.<br /><br />I saw her present briefly last November, and we have started offering nutritional supplements to our periodontal patients. But I admit it was half hearted. I didn’t understand the mechanism of how supplements helped, and I wanted to be able to repeat Dr. Samaha’s success in our own office.<br /><br />It was Dr. Ostler’s presentation that brought the epiphany. He explained the nature of a few genetic defects which make the body work harder to repair damage on a molecular level. I won’t try to explain, and I am not sure that I can. But suffice it to say that there may be about 20% of the population whose genetics interfere with the body’s defenses or repair mechanisms enough to affect there ability to defend themselves against the pathogens of periodontal disease. And if we can provide molecules to help them in the diet, their defenses or repair mechanisms can be more normal. I would speculate that Dr. Edell does not have any of these genetic anomalies, so he would be correct in saying that he does not need them.<br /><br />The day of genetic medicine and dentistry is coming, and soon. Doctors will be able to look at the entire genome for known genetic polymorphisms and either repair them or provide the work-around to help people avoid getting sick. Right now the reams of data from the entire genome is overwhelming and expensive to acquire. But the days of computer interpretation of the data are here and soon the practice of medicine and dentistry will be vastly changed by the information from the genetic testing.<br /><br />So my take on this new understanding, is that we must infer from unusual presentations of periodontal disease that nutritional supplementation is necessary or the person will not ever get healthy. And there is another bit of evidence that it is just not always the fault of the person that they are not healthy. We have placed too much blame on people for their dental diseases. Good oral hygiene certainly helps people prevent dental diseases. But for somebody who has been infected with aggressive pathogens, or is genetically missing the ability to effectively fight the pathogens, good oral hygiene is just not enough.<br /><br />I have never felt so needed. Now be well.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-60872614934540294312009-11-01T10:47:00.000-08:002009-11-01T11:07:56.692-08:00Leading Cardilologist Comments on Gum Disease<iframe allowfullscreen='allowfullscreen' webkitallowfullscreen='webkitallowfullscreen' mozallowfullscreen='mozallowfullscreen' width='320' height='266' src='https://www.blogger.com/video.g?token=AD6v5dw9hqh5brH2qONxagwhbQdqTX2d5E1K2p0t3rd8IW4x04DXfjxXXcA4RhfoSyQd1BRv-MogNBA24f5koH4' class='b-hbp-video b-uploaded' frameborder='0'></iframe><br /><br />If you are a cardiologist, a dentist, or even just any American over the age of 40, I recommend that you spend the fourteen minutes to hear the message above. Dr. Ridker, the director of the Center for Cardiolovascular Disease Prevention, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, was the keynote speaker at the American Academy of Periodontology this year.<br /><br />Dr. Ridker is proposing double blind studies to prove that inflammation from periodontal disease is related to death by cardiovascular disease. In a previous blog, I proposed that we stop discussing the possible relationship between gum disease and heart attacks and admit that the bacteria from the gum disease are causing heart attacks. Dr. Ridker is recognizing that inflammation is a more important indicator of cardiovascular risk than high cholesterol, and proposing studies to prove just that.<br /><br />I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to be part of the control group. The scientist in me wants the definitive proof, but the clinician in me already knows the likely outcome. We test the C reactive protein of our periodontal patients before we commence treatment. We see dramatic declines in the C reactive protein levels of the patients who get their periodontal disease under control. And as Dr. Ridker admits, your C reactive protein levels are a better indicator of heart attack risk than your cholesterol levels. Yet while most American adults know their blood cholesterol levels, almost none know their C reactive protein level.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-20627120879881824742009-10-21T08:42:00.000-07:002009-10-21T08:44:16.160-07:00Obstructive Sleep ApneaIt has been estimated that 17% of American adults have obstructive sleep apnea, with 85% being undiagnosed. OSA is the most common chronic disease in developed countries. The person who is suffering from sleep apnea, has brief periods of interrupted breathing during sleep. He is unaware that this is happening, but the quality of sleep suffers greatly.<br /><br />The symptoms that most likely indicates risk for obstructive sleep apnea are snoring, fatigue, morning headaches, or daytime sleepiness. If you grind your teeth at night, your risk jumps to 80%. If you had four premolar teeth extracted for orthodontics, your risk is 80%.<br /><br />Why should you be concerned? OSA is a cause of high blood pressure, which leads to risk of death by heart attack. Reggie White, a famous retired football player, died of a heart attack attributed to OSA in his sleep at age 43. OSA would be a much more common cause of death on death certificates, if it were not for the fact that it only causes the heart attack that causes death. Most autopsies list heart attack as the cause of death without commenting on the cause of the heart attack.<br /><br />OSA also upsets the leptin cycle which causes your body to think it is hungry when it is not. The result is obesity. The weight gain that results then makes the OSA worse, which makes the weight gain worse.<br /><br /><br />OSA is a cause of ADHD, ADD, depression and sexual dysfunction. OSA is a major cause of heartburn and gastric reflux.<br /><br />Why is a dentist interested in OSA? We see people every day with symptoms of OSA. Our office has a simple screening device which you wear at home for one night. When you return the device, we get a computer printout of how many times you have had episodes of obstructive breathing problems. If your problems are severe, we make a referral to a sleep disorders doctor. But if your problems are mild or moderate, you can be successfully treated with an oral appliance which holds your chin forward when you sleep (mandibular advancement device). I wear one of these appliances every night, and I have lost 25 pounds since I started. My blood pressure has dropped to normal, without pills that have side effects.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-45642106667968186742009-09-16T08:36:00.000-07:002009-09-16T08:40:16.165-07:00US Health Care Debate MIsses the PointThere is little argument that the US health care model needs to be changed. But up to this moment, the arguments going on in congress make me think we are missing the boat entirely. What they are debating is changing how health care will be paid for, and how health care will be distributed. What we need is a fundamental redesign of our health care model, starting with the first day of medical school.<br /><br />Considering how many years of their young lives they give up, in my opinion, physicians are some of the most under-compensated people in our society, right along with teachers. It takes until the early to mid thirties before a physician finally gets into practice. In the mean time, most of their college classmates have been out earning a living for a decade, investing in their retirement, buying houses, having nice vacations, while the medical residents are subsisting at near minimum wage, barely making ends meet.<br /><br />And some of their years of training are brutal. During my one year of internship, I had two surgical interns as roommates. They would typically sneak moments of sleep in the hospital for two full days, before coming home for a good night’s sleep (maybe six hours) on the third night. <br /><br />When I was in college in the 1970’s, the best and brightest of the college students were pre-med. There was a promise of a good income to all who could beat out the fierce competition to get into medical school (less than one in ten would succeed), and put in all the hard years of work to become a trained physician. But for decades now, the insurance companies have been dictating compensation to the doctors, who almost all have to sign on or go out of business. Become a member of their panel of doctors, and they will send you plenty of insured patients, but the doctor will work for what the insurance company determines is fair. The result has been a steady drop in the relative incomes of the very people whom we trust to keep us healthy.<br /><br />But even worse, is the way that doctors are compensated in our current economy. Doctors are paid for doing procedures. Pap smears, X-rays, tonsillectomies, vaccinations, exams, crowns, root canals. It is way more lucrative to treat a heart attack victim than it is to prevent the heart attack. And that is just wrong.<br /><br />But insurance companies are only one of the major forces that are influencing our health care system. Let us not forget the influence of the drug companies. The drug companies hit the jackpot when they create a drug to handle the symptoms of a chronic disease that is affecting millions of people. It is way more lucrative to manage the symptoms than it is to cure the disease. When you are cured, you no longer have a need for their drugs.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-9440968267269762932009-09-14T21:59:00.000-07:002009-09-14T22:09:18.559-07:00Could Diabetes be Caused by Periodontal PathogensWe know that diabetes is multi-factorial. We have known since at least the 1970’s that diabetes and gum disease are related. We see more gum disease in diabetics and more diabetes in people with gum disease. A diabetic has a poorer healing response, so it would seem to follow that people with diabetes would defend themselves against gum disease wounds with less success than a non-diabetic. And dentists have been comfortable enough in that belief to treat diabetics more aggressively when the signs of gum disease appear.<br /><br />But isn’t it possible that the insulin insufficiency diabetes, (the pancreas does not produce enough insulin), is being CAUSED by the same pathogens that might be causing pancreatic cancer, perhaps a less virulent strain? Remember the spirochetes that Dr. Nordquist implicated in coronary artery disease? Isn't it possible that another species of spirochetes could be attacking the pancreas? Shouldn't we be treating periodontal disease as if we could prevent chronic diseases of the rest of the body? It would seem to me that we should.<br /><br />Gregory L Sawyer DDSGregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-22227365305140981852009-09-10T05:26:00.000-07:002009-09-10T05:32:05.382-07:00Oral/Systemic ConnectionThere are two books that have made significant impact in my thinking process about the connection between gum disease and other systemic diseases. In Plague Time, the author, Paul Ewald postulates that the majority of chronic diseases that plague mankind are really chronic transmissible infections. We all know acute transmissible infections, the cold and flu being the most common. They attack us shortly after we have been exposed, and generally run their courses in a matter of a week or so. But chronic transmissible infections are different. These infections can wait for years or even decades to attack us, and all the while we can be spreading them without knowing we are infected. Dr. Ewald gives multiple examples in his book, but the one that jumped out at me was a cancer pathogen in Japan that is spread from mother to daughter in breast milk that does not manifest until the fifth or sixth decade of life, by which time the daughter has already passed the pathogen to the grand-daughter.<br /><br />What is difficult for us to imagine, is that there are chronic diseases such as cancers that have a pathogen as the cause because we don’t know or can’t find what the actual pathogen is. The invention of the microscope allowed mankind to look at one celled animals first the first time, but their existence had already been postulated if not yet well understood by the infectious disease specialists at the time.<br /><br />Wouldn’t a transmissible pathogen explain the breast cancer cluster in Marin County of California? Researchers have looked at the air, the water, the high power lines and who knows what else in Marin without an explanation of the breast cancer cluster there.<br /><br />Wouldn’t a sexually transmitted pathogen explain the fact that a man’s risk for prostate cancer is exactly in line with the number of sex partners? The fact that we don’t know what that pathogen is does not diminish the likelihood of its existence.<br /><br />What does all of this discussion have to do with our oral health? Well, I asked Dr. Ewald if he thought that the route of entry to the body of some of these pathogens might be through the bleeding gums. He told me that he thought it was not only possible but likely.<br /><br />Which brings me to the other book that has had a major effect on my thinking. Stealth Killer, by WIlliam Nordquist. Dr. Nordquist is also a dentist, who had noticed the presence of spirochetal bacteria in the biofilms of the plaques of gum disease. These spirochetes worry me, because they are related to the bacteria that cause Syphilis and Lyme disease, which are truly dread diseases with no known cure if they aren’t defeated soon after infection. They worried Dr. Nordquist even more (and sooner), so he began studying them.<br /><br />When a mature spirochete is attacked by antibiotics, it rolls its body up into a little ball that resembles a spore. The spores are impervious to any known attack that we can mount against them, and they can live for decades in the tissue of the body waiting for a signal to attack the host. Dr. Nordquist identified that presence of these spores in the bacterial plaques that had occluded the coronary arteries of recent heart attack victims. How did those spores get there? Since the exact same spores can be found in the plaques around the teeth under the gums, it would certainly follow that these are getting access to the bloodstream via the bleeding gums. The bacteria can be as small as 1 micron, and the red blood cells that we are seeing are between 70-100 microns in size. Isn’t it likely that these bacteria are getting access back through the damaged blood vessel wall in the gums and attacking the blood vessel walls around the heart? And when we use an antibiotic, these spores defend themselves from the attack by rolling up into the defensive spores that we see in the coronary arteries of recent heart attack victims and the gums of periodontal patients. <br /><br />I am tired of the hedging of all the doctors that are saying that gum disease MAY be related to other diseases such as coronary artery disease. Isn’t it time that we stop the hedging and say that the bacteria from bleeding gums create the bacterial plaques that CAUSE heart attacks? The evidence here is nearly as strong as the evidence that HIV causes AIDS, and we can’t prove that either. Why can’t we prove HIV causes AIDS? Do you want to volunteer for the study to be inoculated with HIV and wait to see if you develop AIDS? Me neither.<br /><br />And what about pancreatic cancer? What is the cause? We will admit that it MAY be related to gum disease again. What about Alzheimer’s disease? Renal (kidney) Insufficiency? Preterm births? Ischemic stroke? What else?<br /><br />Gregory L Sawyer DDSGregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-62345917930069905122009-09-09T05:13:00.000-07:002009-09-09T05:22:25.968-07:00Risk Assesment cont.I have seen older people who have started taking medicines for chronic illnesses that dry up the protective saliva. This has become so common that it has been called, MIX, for medicine induced xerostomia (dryness of the mouth.) When you eat, your mouth becomes acidic (low pH) as the beginning of the digestive process. The saliva buffers the pH of the mouth, so that in a normal mouth, the pH returns to normal within about a half hour of a meal. But in a person with a dry mouth, it can take hours. Indeed for the person with a dry mouth, the mouth can live in a highly acid environment from breakfast until hours after bedtime, because by time the limited saliva has had a chance to buffer the mouth from the last meal, the person has eaten again.<br /><br />Type of bacteria and saliva amount (and pH) are predictors of risk for cavities. It is possible for dentists to evaluate you for that risk by testing the saliva. And it is possible to treat the saliva of those people determined to be at risk for cavities to reduce the risk, before the damage is done to the teeth. This is done with a series of mouth rinses that over a period of time lower the acidity of the saliva.<br /><br />Risk for gum disease can likewise be assessed by determining the bacterial make up of the fluid next to the teeth at the deepest invaginations of the gums. The unhealthy bacteria, are anaerobes, or bacteria that prefer an environment that is without oxygen. The bacteria can be observed and generally identified as unhealthy with the use of a microscope. The exact make up of the gum disease-causing bacteria and the approximate numbers can be determined by a test called DNA-PCR, (DNA-polymerase chain reaction)<br /><br />The presence of the unhealthy bacteria can be determined before the damage has started from the inflammatory process that results from gum disease. And science is finding that the damage to the body goes well beyond the teeth and gums.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-78285259234590930532009-09-07T05:53:00.000-07:002009-09-07T06:00:17.059-07:00The traditional dental exam, is a recording of historical damage; recent history in the case of those who visit the dentist regularly, or accumulated damage in the case of those who avoid the dentist for long periods of time. The exam is usually done with an explorer, a sharp instrument that allows a dentist to envision breaches in the continuity of the surface of the tooth, for the purpose of creating a plan of action to repair the damage. <br /><br />There are some dentists who look beyond the teeth at the gums and surrounding structures in the mouth. The examination of the gums is usually done with a notched probe, and the invagination of the gums around the teeth is measured in millimeters. This gives a look at the historical damage to the gums and supporting bone for a plan of the repair.<br /><br />But the pursuit of understanding of the microbiology of the disease processes can lead us to an examination process that can anticipate the damage before it has been done. This can be thought of as disease risk assessment and management.<br /><br />The diseases that dentists deal with are intimately transmissible, bacterial infections. What you think of as dental diseases such as cavities or bleeding gums, are really the result of the disease process, not the diseases themselves. The disease is the bacterial infection, the hole in the tooth is only the symptom. If you repair the damage without treating the cause, the damage will recur. Those people think of themselves as “cavity prone.” There is an inherited host resistance component, but the occurrence of genuinely soft teeth is rare. Most people who have soft teeth, have softened them by diet to help make themselves cavity prone.<br /><br />Regular risk assessment is important, because the risk changes throughout a lifetime. A baby’s risk of dental decay is transmitted directly from the mother. I witnessed just last night a loving mother feeding her one year old from her own soup bowl in a restaurant. One bite for mommy, one bite for baby. It was a joyous moment for the happy family, but the dark side of the ritual is the transmission of decay producing bacteria from the mother to the baby.<br /><br />It is not uncommon for me to see a pre-teen girl who has been cavity-free all of her life, show up in my office with a mouth full of cavities. She had made it this far disease-free because she had not had the bacteria that caused cavities in her mouth. (Mommy either didn’t share her spoon, or didn’t have the bacteria) But as soon as she is inoculated with cavity causing bacteria by her first boyfriend, the cavities follow. Her risk for cavities has changed.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8485466303488559087.post-23883244009603123122009-09-06T08:45:00.000-07:002009-09-06T09:20:07.571-07:00If you must drink carbonated drinksI am finally going to bite the proverbial bullet and begin writing down all these random thoughts that I have to share. A blog just seems like the best way to get the thinking out. I welcome your comments, and I promise to be controversial. While the blog is intended for the public, it will have topics that will appeal to fellow dentists. Please forgive me if I don't write to the level of an eighth grader. Some of this thinking will be well above the heads of an eighth grader.<br /><br />I saw a presentation two weeks ago at the World Congress of Minimally Invasive Dentistry on the relative risks to the teeth from decay of drinking various popular drinks. The teeth are continuously demineralized from the food and drink and remineralized from the saliva in a process that repeats every time food or drink passes the lips. The teeth decay when they are attacked by the decay causing bacteria after they have been weakened by demineralization.<br /><br />I have always recommended avoiding sodas because of the high acidity of the drink caused by the carbonic acid that makes the bubbles. There is no surprise that Coca Cola is bad for your teeth. Some time ago I found that sports drinks like Gatorade without bubbles have even higher acidity than sodas.<br /><br />Dental research designed a study to see how the various drinks affect the demineralization of the teeth. And not surprisingly, Coca Cola did not do well, but it was not the worst. Mountain Dew was responsible for the most tooth structure dissolving with time of any of the drinks tested. <br /><br />The biggest surprise for me, was A & W root beer, which is also carbonated with carbonic acid. But the study showed that A & W root beer was the closest to water in low potential for damage to the teeth. As a matter of fact, it helped remineralize the teeth.<br /><br />So if you must drink soda, drink root beer. It has been shown to be the least destructive to the teeth of any of the popular sodas.Gregory L Sawyer DDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11300184328276237229noreply@blogger.com0