Research shows that poor oral health will cause serious issues since the arrival of Covid. Study shows that people with bad oral health can have more drastic symptoms if they catch the coronavirus. The certainty that there’s a connection between oral health and COVID is less startling when evaluating the relation between oral hygiene and other diseases. Poor oral health has been related to making many other diseases worse. Primarily this occurs when bad hygiene is strengthened for a long duration, leading to dysbiosis which refers to where the bacteria in the mouth shift from a quiet state into a contentious one. As the bacteria become annoyed, they can result in gum disease, eating away at the mouth tissues and passing into the bloodstream. And when they reach there, the bacteria can then move around the body and settle in various parts of the body and raise inflammation levels.
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If this transpires, no part of the body can’t potentially be impacted. Bad oral hygiene can have an effect on the heart, increase blood pressure and raise blood sugar levels. It’s been associated with premature births, arthritis, respiratory disease, and even some neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s. The same thing is happening with COVID. Described in relation to those with moderate symptoms, people with severe COVID symptoms have increased levels of a specific inflammatory marker. Several people with severe COVID also endure a “cytokine storm”, where the immune system moves into overdrive conflict with the virus and damages the body’s tissues at the same time. People with poor oral health also sometimes have heightened levels of CRP and cytokines – which suggests that gum disease can trigger the same sort of serious immune response as COVID but to the least degree. So if the two diseases enter the body at the same time then it’s possible that they together might tip the immune response into harming the body’s tissues, leading to horrible outcomes.