Looking for another reason to quit? Recent studies at Boston
University’s Goldman School of Dental Medicine reveal that your gender, how
much you smoke and how long you’ve been smoking can significantly multiply your
need for root canal treatment. To sum up the findings, men and women are
distinctly different when it comes to dental health.
Men, it turns out, have the odds stacked against them when
it comes to cavities, gum disease and oral cancer. Smoking puts men at twice
the risk for developing these dental problems than women. Men who smoke also
need more root canals.
"Our study has shown that men have almost twice the
risk of having root canal treatments if they smoke cigarettes, compared to men
who never smoke," said Elizabeth Krall Kaye, author of the Boston
University study and professor in the department of health policy and health
services.
So does that mean women are in the clear? Not really, says
Kaye. Historically, women haven't smoked as long or as much per day as men but
Kaye believes that the risk associated with smoking and root canals still
applies.
Although it might seem obvious, why smoking makes men and
women more susceptible to dental problems is still somewhat of a mystery. Kaye
and her associates think the answers lie in what smoking does to your overall
health: It affects your ability to ward off infection, increases inflammation
and damages your circulation system.
The good news is you can greatly reduce your need for root
canals by quitting cigarette smoking and staying smoke-free. In fact, if you
stay smoke-free for at least nine years, your chances of needing a root canal
treatment can drop as low as a non-smoker's.
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