Discussion:
Lose your teeth, lose your mind
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⊙_⊙
2015-07-05 03:17:26 UTC
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Lose your teeth, lose your mind

Apr 30, 2010
(PhysOrg.com) -- Ever have a senior moment? Then you might be missing some teeth, too.



Researchers at Boston University Henry M. Goldman School of Dental Medicine (GSDM) link tooth loss and periodontal disease to cognitive decline in one of the largest and longest prospective studies on the topic to date, released in this month's issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
Dr. Elizabeth Krall Kaye looked for patterns in dental records from 1970 to 1973 to determine if periodontal disease and tooth loss predicted whether people did well or poorly on cognitive tests. She found that for each tooth lost per decade, the risk of doing poorly increased approximately eight to 10 percent.

More cavities usually meant lower cognition too. People with no tooth loss tended to do better on the tests.

Dr. Kaye says inflammation is a possible cause, noting that other studies found higher levels of inflammation markers in people with Alzheimer's. "Periodontal disease and caries are infectious diseases that introduce inflammatory proteins into the blood," she says. "There's a lot of circumstantial evidence that inflammation raises your risk of cognitive decline and it could be that gum inflammation is one of the sources."

The men studied--veterans living in the Boston metropolitan area--enrolled in the VA Dental Longitudinal Study in the late 1960s and early 70s and came back for medical, dental, and cognitive exams, which started in 1993, every three years.

Participants took two cognitive tests. The first, the Mini-Mental State Examination, tests orientation, attention, calculation, recall, language, and motor skills. The second, a spatial copying test, asks participants to copy nine geometric designs ranging from easy to complex.

"The ability to copy is one of the things people lose as they lose cognitive ability," Dr. Kaye says.

Physicians might want to think about the dental health of their patients who test poorly, according to Dr. Kaye. "The findings should also give dentists yet another reason to prevent tooth loss and periodontal disease and encourage patients to do as much as they can to prevent dental disease," she says.
More information: The study, Tooth Loss and Periodontal Disease Predict Poor Cognitive Function in Older Men, is available online at www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/123339485/HTMLSTART .

Provided by Boston University


http://m.phys.org/news/2010-04-teeth-mind.html
j***@gmail.com
2015-08-02 13:09:34 UTC
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Very interesting
John H. Gohde
2015-08-02 15:18:15 UTC
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Post by j***@gmail.com
Very interesting
Lose your teeth, lose your silver amalgams, and regain your mind. :)

What a putz Science Imbeciles be.
Taka
2015-08-08 07:17:09 UTC
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Post by John H. Gohde
Post by j***@gmail.com
Very interesting
Lose your teeth, lose your silver amalgams, and regain your mind. :)
What a putz Science Imbeciles be.
All Putzes with rotted teeth should have them torn out like our senior resident!
John H. Gohde
2015-08-08 08:49:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by Taka
Post by John H. Gohde
Post by j***@gmail.com
Very interesting
Lose your teeth, lose your silver amalgams, and regain your mind. :)
What a putz Science Imbeciles be.
All Putzes with rotted teeth should have them torn out like our senior resident!
It was 1991, you fucking tard!

That is ancient history, in case this moron does NOT know. :)
Taka
2015-08-08 22:08:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by John H. Gohde
Post by Taka
Post by John H. Gohde
Post by j***@gmail.com
Very interesting
Lose your teeth, lose your silver amalgams, and regain your mind. :)
What a putz Science Imbeciles be.
All Putzes with rotted teeth should have them torn out like our senior resident!
It was 1991, you fucking tard!
That is ancient history, in case this moron does NOT know. :)
Loosing teeth at 42, OMG! The ceramics must be approaching its lifetime warranty by now ... Jaws still holding tight reinforced by all those steroid pills?
Taka
2015-08-19 22:30:59 UTC
Permalink
Stem-Cell Dental Implants Grow New Teeth in Your Mouth

Recently, the Journal of Dental Research published a study according to which a new tissue regeneration technique may help in regrowing pearly white teeth.

Dr Jeremy Mao, the Edward V. Zegarellu Professor of Dental Medicine at Columbia University Medical Center, explains that a three-dimensional scaffold with growth factor has the potential to regenerate and regrow anatomically correct teeth within just nine weeks after the implantation.

The procedure was developed in the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine Laboratory at the university. In the process, the body's own stem cells go toward the scaffold, which consists of completely natural materials. Once the scaffold is colonized with stem cells, the tooth starts growing in the socket, and later merges with the surrounding tissue.

In this way teeth do not grow in a Petri dish, and anatomically correct teeth regenerate by using the body's own material. This dental treatment offers a faster recovery time and, unlike implantation, a completely natural regrowth process.

The patent applications are already filed, and the Columbia University seeks associates that will help in the commercialization of this technology. Dr Mao seeks for the best approach when it comes to applying his technique in cost-effective clinical therapies.

MORE: http://www.popsci.com/ig-nobels-have-been-honoring-sciences-funniest-research-25-years-interactive
John H. Gohde
2015-09-01 04:11:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Taka
Stem-Cell Dental Implants Grow New Teeth in Your Mouth
Recently, the Journal of Dental Research published a study according to which a new tissue regeneration technique may help in regrowing pearly white teeth.
Dr Jeremy Mao, the Edward V. Zegarellu Professor of Dental Medicine at Columbia University Medical Center, explains that a three-dimensional scaffold with growth factor has the potential to regenerate and regrow anatomically correct teeth within just nine weeks after the implantation.
The procedure was developed in the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine Laboratory at the university. In the process, the body's own stem cells go toward the scaffold, which consists of completely natural materials. Once the scaffold is colonized with stem cells, the tooth starts growing in the socket, and later merges with the surrounding tissue.
In this way teeth do not grow in a Petri dish, and anatomically correct teeth regenerate by using the body's own material. This dental treatment offers a faster recovery time and, unlike implantation, a completely natural regrowth process.
The patent applications are already filed, and the Columbia University seeks associates that will help in the commercialization of this technology. Dr Mao seeks for the best approach when it comes to applying his technique in cost-effective clinical therapies.
MORE: http://www.popsci.com/ig-nobels-have-been-honoring-sciences-funniest-research-25-years-interactive
The Public Wants Mint, NOT Arch Linux
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/comp.os.linux.advocacy/ir3nbe7fmVA/etjc8FixhhgJ

It is high time to start thinking about the greater good of making the Linux Desktop competitive with Microsoft Windows.

Stop being a Putz!

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