Eating dark chocolate could halve the risk of gum disease, researchers say – The US Sun

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on pinterest
Share on telegram
Share on email
Share on reddit
Share on whatsapp
Share on telegram


EATING chocolate could halve the risk of gum disease, researchers believe.

The antioxidants in cocoa beans, especially dark chocolate, may be behind this, experts say.

1

Eating chocolate could halve the risk of gum disease, researchers believeCredit: Getty

Unsalted cheese and peanuts are also associated with a lower risk, but filtered coffee and low-calorie drinks may increase your risk.

The study from Chongqing Medical University in China reported: “Our findings suggest the potential of personalized diets.”

Chocolate and cheese are associated with a 54% lower risk of gum disease, while unsalted peanuts are associated with a 71% lower risk.

Rice is associated with a 58% lower risk, but filtered coffee increases the risk by 42%, with a 57% higher risk with low-calorie drinks.

It is believed that additives in drinks may be a factor.

Gum disease: Periodontitis explained by the doctor



This story originally appeared on The-sun.com read the full story

Support fearless, independent journalism

We are not owned by a billionaire or shareholders – our readers support us. Donate any amount over $2. BNC Global Media Group is a global news organization that delivers fearless investigative journalism to discerning readers like you! Help us to continue publishing daily.

Support us just once

We accept support of any size, at any time – you name it for $2 or more.

Related

More

1 2 3 9,595

Don't Miss