Our Sense of Humor
When Teeth Pulled,
Memory Goes Faster
When your dentist pulls an aching tooth he could be yanking out
some of your memory at the same time, according to a new Swedish
study to be presented last month.
"Teeth appear to be of the utmost importance to our memories," said
Jon Bergdahl, an psychology professor at the Umeaa University in
northern Sweden, a dentist and one of the authors of the study.
For the study, which is part of a broader memory study called
Betula Studien, researchers followed 1,962 people aged 35 to 90
starting in 1988, comparing the memories of those who still had
teeth and those who had pulled all their teeth and were using dentures.
"When people have no teeth their memories are clearly worse
than when they have teeth," Bergdahl said.
Recent Japanese studies on rats and monkeys have shown the link
between teeth and memory but according to Bergdahl this is the
first large-scale study on humans that clearly connects the same
dots.
While the Swedish research has yet to unveil what impact pulling
a single tooth has on the human memory, Bergdahl said that "going
forward, we plan to look into how many teeth a person has to lose
before it affects their memory. We will also investigate how tooth
decay affects memory loss, and what affect tooth implants have".
He insisted however that he didn't expect future studies to reveal
that implants improve memory.
"I don't think that is very probable. Animal tests have shown
that pulling teeth severs nerves to the brain," Bergdahl said,
pointing out that the new Swedish study could dramatically change
dental care for the elderly in the future.
"We might want to think twice before pulling out teeth that
are a problem," he said. |