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Autoimmune Diseases and Oral Disease

Wednesday, January 11, 2012 @ 04:01 PM
posted by Dr. James G. Hood

Autoimmune diseases are the result of the body responding in an inappropriate manner to normal tissues and/or substances present in the body, causing prolonged inflammation followed by tissue destruction.  The body is fooled and can’t recognize the difference between healthy tissue and disease.  The body, therefore, mounts an immune response (directs antibodies against its own tissues) against itself, as if allergic to itself.  The cause of this dysfunctional behavior is unknown, it may be caused by a drug or toxin or bacterial or viral infection or environmental exposure to foreign substances.  The result of the body’s inability to recognize the difference between normal tissue and disease results in destruction.  As we age, this alone causes our immune system to decline in effectiveness.  Autoimmune diseases affect over 24 million Americans and are one of our society’s leading causes of death and disability.  Autoimmune diseases are ranked as the number one cause of heart disease, cancer, and all diseases.

A couple of the most common autoimmune diseases are diabetes (Type 1), rheumatoid arthritis, and allergies.  Many autoimmune diseases also may have a genetic or traumatic component.

Here is a short additional list of autoimmune diseases and more are being discovered all the time.  All of these diseases should have the autoimmune prefix:

Achalasia

Pancreatitis

Addison’s disease

Parkinson’s disease

Behcet’s disease

Pemphigus/pemphigoid

Celiac disease

Pernicious anemia

Crohn’s disease

Polymyositis

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Reactive arthritis

Dermatomyositis

Rheumatic fever

Eosinophilic esophagitis

Sarcoidosis

Fibromyalgia

Scleroderma

Graves disease

Sjögren’s syndrome

Guillain–Barre syndrome

Systemic lupus erythematosis

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis

Ulcerative colitis

Hepatitis

Uveitis

IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome)

Vitiligo

Menier’s disease

Wegener’s granulomatosis

Multiple Sclerosis

Wilson’s disease

Myasthenia gravis

 

 

 

 

Autoimmune Disease Causes:  The immune system is also thought to be suppressed by multiple factors, including abuse of:

  • alcohol
  • caffeine
  • tobacco
  • sugar (this cannot be over-emphasized)
  • drugs
  • food (poor diet or contaminated with herbicides, hormones, etc.)
  • sleep (lack of)

As well as exposure to environmental pollution, including:

  • automobile exhaust
  • chemical fertilizers
  • cigarette smoke
  • heavy metal
  • herbicides
  • industrial waste
  • pesticides
  • stress

So, what has autoimmune diseases and oral disease (periodontal disease and tooth decay) have in common?  Well, much more than one might think:  Plaque and calculus left on teeth cause inflammation, initially gingivitis, followed often by periodontal disease (which we used to refer to as periodontitis).  Any time you see –itis on the end of a word, it is screaming inflammation.  Remember:  it is always means it is inflammation.  Chronic inflammation causes destruction of tissue.  Periodontal disease causes destruction of all periodontal tissues, gum, bone, and periodontal ligament, causing loss of teeth.  Tooth decay causes loss of tooth structure.  Since periodontal tissues are all tissues supporting teeth in the mouth, without them – no teeth.How periodontal disease (inflammation of all periodontal tissues) leads to loss at of oral tissues, including teeth, is a simple model demonstration for what happens to a body with autoimmune diseases.Anything that a patient can do to minimize or eliminate inflammation will lessen the effects of the disease.  A few of the things a patient can do to lessen the effects of many of these diseases are to avoid abuse of/or exposure to the above mentioned factors.  Also, as always, eat lots of antioxidants found in fresh fruit and vegetables.  Include vitamin C, vitamin E, green tea extract, beta-carotene, grape seed-skin extract, coenzyme Q-10 (coQ10) and selenium in your diet.Also, talk to your dental and medical professionals on current treatments.  Find support groups, ask others with your particular autoimmune disease how they cope.Good luck…keep brushing and flossing,Dr. James G. Hood* ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ *Dental Care Associates of Spokane Valley, P.S.
Family and Cosmetic Dentistry Welcomes Patients
from Age 2 to 102!
James G. Hood, D.D.S., M.A.
507 North Sullivan Road, Suite A-1
Spokane Valley, WA 99037-8576  USA
Phone: (509) 928-9100  |  Fax: (509) 928-0414
Email: drhood@drhood.comWebsites: www.drhood.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalley.com

Blogs: www.drjamesghoodblog.com
www.dentalhealthandnutritionblog.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalleyblog.com
www.jamesandkarenhoodfoundationblog.org
www.sjogrensblog.org

Online Store: www.dentalhealthandnutritionstore.com

Dry Mouth? Sjögren’s Disease?

Monday, January 9, 2012 @ 05:01 PM
posted by Dr. James G. Hood

Sjögren’s syndrome is a common autoimmune disorder affecting nearly four million people in the U.S. If you have Sjögren’s syndrome, you may have dry mouth symptoms. Dry mouth (xerostomia) can have multiple sources, for example:

- Lifestyle (smoking, chewing tobacco, mouth breathing)

- Dehydration

- Chemotherapy

- Nerve damage (to head and neck)

- Medications used as, or to treat:

Acne Muscle relaxers
Allergies Nausea
Anxiety Obesity
Asthma Pain
Colds Parkinson’s disease
Depression Psychotic disorders
Diarrhea Sedatives
Epilepsy Urinary incontinence
Hypertension

 

And certain diseases such as:

- Alzheimer’s Disease

- Cystic Fibrosis

- Diabetes

- HIV/AIDS

- Hypertension

- Mumps

- Parkinson’s Disease

- Rheumatoid Arthritis

- Sjögren’s – a disease which I also am affected with

- Stroke

SJÖGREN’S DISEASE

Sjögren’s disease is an autoimmune disease that attacks the exocrine glands of the human body. The most common first symptom of the disease is DRY MOUTH and dry eyes. Because of the gradual onset of the disease, most patients are affected by the disease for five to seven years before a diagnosis of Sjögren’s disease is made.

Your dentist is often the medical professional to first recognize the symptoms of this chronic disease. Your dentist is also a most significant professional to have to support you if you are diagnosed with Sjögren’s or any of the above listed maladies, which result in DRY MOUTH.

People with dry mouth should carry water with them where ever they go, have it readily available at work, in the car, and next to their bed. The simplest solutions to a problem often offer the most immediate benefit.

Dry mouth leaves teeth without the protective enzymes found in saliva, making teeth much more prone to rampant decay. We, as dentists, can fluoridate teeth in various ways, to remineralize teeth and make them more resistant to tooth decay.

Anyone with Sjögren’s disease needs a dentist as part of their support group, to advise and treat the results of this disease. Anyone with dry mouth, for any reason, would benefit with a support dentist.

Always here for your support,

Dr. James G. Hood

* ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ *

Dental Care Associates of Spokane Valley, P.S.
Family and Cosmetic Dentistry Welcomes Patients
from Age 2 to 102!

James G. Hood, D.D.S., M.A.
507 North Sullivan Road, Suite A-1
Spokane Valley, WA 99037-8576 USA
Phone: (509) 928-9100 | Fax: (509) 928-0414
Email: drhood@drhood.com

Websites: www.drhood.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalley.com

Blogs: www.drjamesghoodblog.com
www.dentalhealthandnutritionblog.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalleyblog.com
www.jamesandkarenhoodfoundationblog.org
www.sjogrensblog.org

Online Store: www.dentalhealthandnutritionstore.com

Sjögren’s Syndrome – What Next?

Sunday, June 19, 2011 @ 02:06 PM
posted by Dr. James G. Hood

Sjögren’s disease not only affects exocrine glands, but can affect all organs of the human body.  Some of the most common organs affected are:  lungs, liver, kidneys, pancreas, gastrointestinal system, blood vessels, and the central nervous system.

One organ, the pancreas, which functions both as an endocrine and exocrine gland, was affected by my Sjögren’s disease.  I was eating 3 meals a day, at least, taking multiple vitamins, fish oil, and vitamin supplements (especially vitamin D).  One day, about 1½ years after my Sjögren’s diagnosis, I began developing a rash across my shoulders, on my back.  I went to the dermatologist who said it might be psoriasis.  I pressured him to biopsy the lesion, which was getting larger quite rapidly.  To make a long story short, after the biopsy he said it definitely wasn’t psoriasis but it appeared that I had malnutrition. 

I was then sent to an internal medicine physician, who ordered a fecal fat test, and I was found to not be digesting fat.  The exocrine portion of my pancreas was not producing enough enzymes, and I was found to have Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency (EPI) and, therefore, was unable to properly digest food.  Food was fast-tracking right through me.  The internal medicine physician prescribed Creon, which replaces the enzymes from the pancreas.  I take 4 capsules with meals and 2 to 3 with snacks.  This replacement seems to work well for me.  Other Sjögren’s patients, if you begin to drop weight, have a huge diet or diarrhea or get an unusual rash, your pancreas (exocrine portion) may be shutting down.  Talk to your physician.  Online you might find that EPI is more common in German Shepherds than people, but Sjögren’s can affect any organ in the body.

Be vigilant, Sjögren’s can also affect joints, and other autoimmune disease can exist in the same person, particularly rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, polymyositis, or schleroderma.  As long as we are examining the negatives, lymphoma occurs more frequently in patients with Sjögren’s Syndrome.

 

Dental Care Associates of Spokane Valley, P.S.
Family and Cosmetic Dentistry Welcomes Patients
from Age 2 to 102!

James G. Hood, D.D.S., M.A.
507 North Sullivan Road, Suite A-1
Spokane Valley, WA 99037-8576  USA
Phone: (509) 928-9100  |  Fax: (509) 928-0414
Email: drhood@drhood.com

Websites: www.drhood.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalley.com

Blogs: www.drjamesghoodblog.com
www.dentalhealthandnutritionblog.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalleyblog.com
www.jamesandkarenhoodfoundationblog.org
www.sjogrensblog.org

Online Store: www.dentalhealthandnutritionstore.com

Sjögren’s and What Else

Saturday, June 18, 2011 @ 10:06 AM
posted by Dr. James G. Hood

Since Sjögren’s Syndrome is actually a chronic autoimmune disease, people with this malady (9 of 10 which are female) have a higher incidence of developing other autoimmune diseases.

The initial presentation of the disease is often associated with an infection or major stress on the person afflicted.  This usually occurs after age 40.  If it occurs alone, it is called “Primary Sjögren’s.”  When it occurs in a patient with one or more other autoimmune diseases, it is called “Secondary Sjögren’s.” About half of patients with Sjögren’s Syndrome have Secondary Sjögren’s.

Sjögren’s Syndrome is an autoimmune disease affecting the exocrine glands (a person’s white blood cells attack moisture-producing glands).  Dry eyes and dry mouth are the most obvious symptoms; therefore, dentists and eye doctors often are the first to recognize this syndrome.

Each Sjögren’s patient will experience individual levels of discomfort, from mild to extremely debilitating.  Often misdiagnosed, the average patient goes seven years before receiving a Sjögren’s diagnosis.  The earlier a patient is diagnosed, the better.  Often, serious complications can be avoided with the initiation of early treatment.

Sjögren’s disease is not prejudiced, affecting virtually every race and ethnic group.  In the U.S.A. alone, as many as 4,000,000 suffer from Sjögren’s Syndrome.

If in doubt about what to do for your dry mouth, talk to your dentist or call James G. Hood, DDS, MA, at (509) 928-9100 to learn more.  You can also visit his website at: www.drhood.com.  Dr. Hood’s office is conveniently located at:

Dental Care Associates of Spokane Valley, P.S.
Family and Cosmetic Dentistry Welcomes Patients
from Age 2 to 102!

James G. Hood, D.D.S., M.A.
507 North Sullivan Road, Suite A-1
Spokane Valley, WA 99037-8576  USA
Phone: (509) 928-9100  |  Fax: (509) 928-0414
Email: drhood@drhood.com

Websites: www.drhood.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalley.com

Blogs: www.drjamesghoodblog.com
www.dentalhealthandnutritionblog.com
www.dentalcareassociatesofspokanevalleyblog.com
www.jamesandkarenhoodfoundationblog.org
www.sjogrensblog.org

Online Store: www.dentalhealthandnutritionstore.com