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Dental plaques linked with pneumonia in elderly
23rd Nov 2004
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - Bacteria in dental plaque can cause hospital-acquired
pneumonia in elderly nursing home residents, according to a report
in the medical journal Chest.
"The
available evidence suggests that poor oral health, characterized
by inadequate hygiene results in the formation of extensive
(plaques), promotes oral colonization by potential respiratory
(microbes) and increases the risk for serious lower respiratory
tract infections in institutionalized subjects," co-author Dr. Ali
A. El-Solh told Reuters Health.
Dr. El-Solh from University of Buffalo, New York, and colleagues
investigated the rate of plaque contamination by disease-causing
microbes in institutionalized elderly patients. In addition, the
researchers sought to determine whether these bugs were related to
those recovered from patients who developed pneumonia.
Fourteen of 49 patients (29 percent) who needed mechanical
assistance to breathe had evidence of hospital-acquired pneumonia
about 12 days after assisted respiration began, the authors
report.
Oral hygiene was poor in patients who did and those who did not
develop pneumonia, the report indicates.
Patients with bacteria in their dental plaques were at increased
risk for developing pneumonia and had a poorer functional status
than their peers without bacteria.
All nine microbes isolated from eight patients with pneumonia
matched those recovered from their dental plaque, the
investigators note.
"The lack of adequate oral hygiene in nursing homes results in an
increase in the mass and complexity of dental plaques, which
fosters an environment that promotes colonization by"
pneumonia-causing microbes, El-Solh told Reuters Health.
"The avoidable, yet undeniable, status quo of poor oral hygiene in
institutionalized elderly will remain unchanged until those who
control distribution of health care resources realize that the
added expense of daily oral care is lower than the cost of
ignoring it," El-Solh added.
Another Good Health Reason to take
a daily Probiotic
(ProdophilusFOS),
mixed in with foods and chewed. (Robert S.
Redfern)
SOURCE: Chest, November 2004. - By Will Boggs, MD
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