People who suffer from gum disease and also have a severe form of rheumatoid arthritis can lower the chronic pain by keeping their teeth healthy
People who suffer from gum disease and also have a severe form of rheumatoid arthritis can lower the chronic pain by keeping their teeth healthy, a new study has said.
The research team from Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine and University Hospitals of Cleveland suggest that both inflammatory diseases share similarities in the progression over time.In both diseases, the soft and hard tissues are destroyed from inflammation caused by toxins from bacterial infection.
"It was exciting to find that if we eliminated the infection and inflammation in the gums, then patients with a severe kind of active rheumatoid arthritis reported improvement on the signs and symptoms of that disease," said Nabil Bissada, D.D.S., chair of the department of periodontics at the dental school.
"It gives us a new intervention," Bissada added.
Conventionally teeth were pulled or antibiotics were given for treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, which actually treated the periodontitis, and the patients got better.
Bissada and co-researcher Dr Ali Askari, chair of the department of rheumatology at University Hospitals studied 40 patients with moderate to severe periodontal disease and a severe form of rheumatoid arthritis.
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The study showed that after receiving treatment for the gum disease, improvement in rheumatoid arthritis symptoms was seen in patients who did and did not receive the anti-TNF-a medications which block the production of TNF-a that aggravate or can cause inflammation.
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The study appears in the Journal of Periodontology.
Source-ANI
RAS