Gum DiseaseWhat Increases Your RiskYou are more likely to have
gum disease if you don't brush and floss your teeth
regularly or well enough to remove
plaque. You are at greater risk for gum
disease if: - You smoke cigarettes or use spit tobacco. Tobacco use is believed
to be one of the biggest risks for gum disease. Tobacco decreases your ability
to fight infection, interferes with healing, and makes you more likely to have
serious gum disease that results in tooth loss.
- Gum disease runs in your family. If you have a family history of
gum disease, you are much more likely than normal to develop it, even if you
take good care of your teeth and gums.
- You are a woman going through the hormonal changes caused by
puberty, menopause, or pregnancy.
- You have a disease that reduces your ability to fight infection,
such as uncontrolled
diabetes,
AIDS, or
leukemia.
- You are under a lot of stress.
Stress can weaken your immune system and make you more likely to develop
infections.
- You eat a diet that is low in vitamins and minerals,
which can weaken your immune system, or high in sugary foods and other
carbohydrates (grains, pasta, bread), which help plaque grow.
- You take certain medicines, such as:
- Seizure-control drugs like phenytoin (Dilantin,
Phenytek).
- Calcium channel blockers, which are
used to control high blood pressure or for people with certain heart
problems.
- Cyclosporine, a medicine that suppresses the immune
system. It is used to keep the body from rejecting transplanted
organs.
- Birth-control pills.
- Medicines used to treat
cancer (chemotherapy).
- Drugs that block androgen to treat prostate
cancer.4
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