How exercising more increases your risk of cavities

Not good for athletes’ teeth either.
Not good for athletes’ teeth either.
Image: Reuters/Brian Snyder
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Though we treat our teeth separately from our bodies, and keep dentistry and medicine in their distinct spheres, as my colleague Olga Khazan pointed out earlier this week, it turns out that teeth are part of our bodies. And as such, you could almost say it makes a certain kind of sense that other things we do to our bodies affect our teeth, too.

One of the most interesting dental correlations of recent times was noted by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which, after the 2008 Beijing Olympics, released a report calling for more research on athletes’ oral health. Apparently some of the Beijing Olympians were not looking like models in a Listerine commercial. And London in 2012 wasn’t much better, according to a study published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine last year.

The IOC suggested that the high rates of tooth decay and gingivitis among elite athletes could be linked to sugary sports drinks. A reasonable proposal, especially since you can often find Olympians gracing the bottles and advertisements of those sports drinks. But a small new study published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports found that there might be a less intuitive reason for the fit bods/bad teeth connection.

The researchers looked at 35 triathletes, and 35 “non-exercising controls.” After gathering some rudimentary information about their demographics, how much they trained, and their predilection for sports drinks, protein bars, and energy gels, they had some dentists check out the participants’ teeth. Unfortunately, the dental examiners knew who was an athlete and who wasn’t: “It was not feasible to blind examiners with regard to test and controls, since the appearance of athletes (figure, muscular mass, and clothes) was obvious to the investigators,” the study reads. Participants’ teeth were rated using the Basic Erosive Wear Examination (BEWE), and received a score based on how closely their teeth resembled wind-worn canyons, I guess.

Teeth cataloged, it was then time for saliva. The participants chewed a piece of wax for five minutes, and then the researchers dunked a pH strip in the resulting spit pool. Fifteen of the athletes then volunteered to repeat this distinguished task while running.

More workout hours logged per week meant a higher risk of cavities.

Athletes’ BEWE scores showed that they were at a medium risk for tooth erosion, whereas the regular person controls were at a low risk. While athletes did have more cavities, that was associated with how much they trained. More workout hours logged per week meant a higher risk of cavities.

Everybody’s spit had pretty neutral pHs when they were just sitting around the lab, jawing on some wax. But, and this is where it gets interesting, athletes saliva had a significantly higher pH (meaning it was more basic, or alkaline) during the workout. They also produced less saliva overall.

There’s a type of protein in saliva, the researchers explain, that is thought to help prevent tooth erosion. The link between working out, saliva pH, and tooth decay, could be because the more alkaline saliva messes with that protein’s protective instincts. The researchers didn’t find any associations with sports drinks.

Triathletes (and Olympians) are a little more extreme when it comes to athleticism, of course, than your average hop-on-the-treadmill-a-couple-times-a-week Joe. It is interesting to think, though, that even if you avoid sugary drinks and brush twice a day, you could be putting your teeth at a different kind of risk when you go to the gym. But, you know, you should still go.

This originally appeared at The Atlantic. More from our sister site:

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