Volume 13 | Issue 2
Volume 13 | Issue 2
Volume 13 | Issue 2
Volume 13 | Issue 1
Volume 13 | Issue 1
Periodontal disease and caries, two prevalent dental conditions, are frequently believed to have minimal effects on overall health. These illnesses are caused by infections in the mouth by microbes with incredibly precise adhesion mechanisms. It is commonly accepted that systemic disease brought on by infectious oral bacteria occurs in patients with immunological and nutritional deficits, such as when individual host defences are compromised, allowing mouth microbes to enter the systemic circulation. Systemic complications from oral microorganisms are typically believed to be limited to just a few particular clinical circumstances, such as bacterial endocarditis. Given this viewpoint, it is obvious why primary care doctors don't pay much attention to dental and oral microbial illnesses.