常用漱口水或增加患心脏病风险
Swilling mouthwash each morning could raise your risk of heart disease, one of the world's leading experts claims. Dr Nathan Bryan, based at the University of Texas, Austin, studies the role nitric oxide - which helps cells communicate - plays in the body's vital organs. He said daily rinsing and gargling, which is meant to eliminate bad breath, also rids the body of the important molecule. The bacteria it kills provide the body with a constant supply of nitric oxide, which controls and regulates blood pressure. Controlling blood pressure is known to be key to preventing cardiovascular disease - the world's leading killer, and strokes. But Dr Bryan also said that poor oral hygiene, such as not using mouthwash, also disrupts the production of nitric oxide. He made the claim in a lecture at the American Naturopathic Medical Association's 36th Annual Convention in Las Vegas. Dr Bryan told attendees: 'Recent discoveries reveal that oral bacteria provide the human body with continuous sources of nitric oxide.' 'Nitric oxide is one of the most important molecules produced in the human body. It controls and regulates blood pressure and is a major factor in preventing CVD.' He added: 'Poor oral hygiene, the use of antiseptic mouthwash or antibiotics can kill these commensal bacteria and disrupt nitric oxide production putting patients at risk for CVD,' News Medical reports. The rise in blood pressure can be as much as 26 mmHg - which could send someone from being deemed healthy to suffering hypertension. Each two-point rise in blood pressure raises the risk of dying from heart disease by seven percent and from stroke by 10 percent, according to separate research. |