Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeHealthHealth hint to chew over

Health hint to chew over

WHEN striving for a healthy balance of mind, body and soul it can be easy to forget your teeth, but oral health can have a significant impact on your overall well-being.
According to research, poor oral health and untreated oral diseases can have a negative impact on quality of life and in many cases, the mouth mirrors the condition of the body as a whole.
For example, because diabetes reduces the body’s resistance to infection, it is common for oral disease in the form of gingivitis to develop, but diabetes is only one example of a disease that will manifest in the mouth.
Links have been found between gum disease and blood conditions such as stroke and heart disease, plus it is understood that a large percentage of bodily diseases have oral manifestations.
This means your dentist may be the first health care professional to identify a possible health problem, making regular dental exams all the more important to help maintain a happy, healthy body.
Regular brushing, flossing and examinations from a dentist are just some of the ways you can help look after your oral health.
If you haven’t been for a dental exam recently, now is the perfect time to book in and see your dentist. Health and well-being starts with oral care.

Previous article
Next article
Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Menopause can mask ovarian cancer

Mater doctors are warning women that the onset of menopause and perimenopause can sometimes mask life-threatening cases of ovarian cancer. Around 1900 Australian women...

Weekend car crashes

More News

Flash flooding Fraser Coast

Police are reminding all drivers not to drive through flood waters with a number of roads closed across the Fraser Coast and North Burnett...

Local authors feathered fantasy

Magic can be found right here on the Sunshine Coast - just ask local children’s author Jayne McIntyre, who has secured a three-book deal...

Project Manta revealed

Professor Kathy Townsend of the University of the Sunshine Coast is a leading marine biologist known for her pioneering research on manta rays. As...

New law puts GPS trackers on bailed youth

The state government says it is delivering on its election promise to make the Sunshine Coast safer with the implementation of a new law...

The riddle of Walshpool Gully

A family friendly children’s show coming to The J in March on Thursday 26 March 11.00am, Friday 27 March 26 6pm. Combining old-fashioned storytelling with...

Pomona crossing designs underway

The state government this week announced design work was underway on safety upgrades for Pomona, including new pedestrian crossings, raised township entry treatments and...

Call for more beach mats

Calls are growing for expanded accessible beach infrastructure across Noosa, with inclusion advocate Lucia Neely urging authorities to roll out disability access mats at...

Leading the way for inclusion

On any given patrol at Noosa Main Beach, you’ll find volunteers watching the water, scanning the horizon and keeping beachgoers safe. Among them is...

Thanks from family

The family of six-year-old Tessa has thanked the Noosa and Sunshine Coast community for continuing to raise urgent funds to help her. So far, more...

Tewantin’s Walking School Bus

Every Tuesday morning during school term, something quite special happens in Tewantin. For more than four years, the Tewantin–Noosa Lions Club has been running its...