Inflamed receding gums. Loose teeth. A buildup of plaque that turns them brown.
Ted Mikuls, M.D. |
Jeff Payne, D.D.S. |
Aching joints. Hands that don’t work. Feet that are too painful to move.
That’s rheumatoid arthritis.
Two investigators at the UNMC believe the same bacteria cause both diseases.
Ted Mikuls, M.D., and Jeff Payne, D.D.S., have joined forces to investigate this link. They are co-investigators on a $1.2 million grant funded by the American College of Rheumatology.
The focus of the study is on P. gingivalis, a nasty bacteria that gets under the gum line and secretes an enzyme that destroys the bone. It also produces a protein that is found in the stiff, aching joints of people with rheumatoid arthritis.
The study involves investigators at UNMC and VA medical centers in Omaha, Dallas, Washington and Salt Lake City.
The will examine blood samples from healthy people who later developed rheumatoid arthritis.
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Nearly 3 million people a year develop rheumatoid arthritis, while 35 percent of adults in the U.S. have periodontitis.
Anyone at any age can develop periodontitis but it is more common in people over the age of 35, Dr. Payne said. The statistics are similar for rheumatoid arthritis, Dr. Mikuls said.
I have had RA for 24 years. Just prior to the time i was diagnosed i had an apicoectomy. Then, later had the tooth extracted. I have had long term soreness with very intermitent/infrequest sharp pain in the area and possibly some bone loss. I have often wondered if this tooth problem could have possibly been a source of my RA