OREBRO, Sweden, Sept. 11 (UPI) -- Building on evidence that periodontitis, or gum disease, is a risk factor for heart disease, researchers found that a specific periodontal pathogen increases inflammation and atherosclerosis in aortic smooth muscle cells.
Researchers in the study, conducted at Örebro University in Sweden, showed in animal models how the pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis, which has been found in the coronary artery plaques of heart attack patients, causes genetic changes that increase the inflammation of heart disease.