- Weight-Loss Drug Zepbound May Lower Heart Failure Deaths
- Nearly 160 Million Americans Harmed by Another’s Drinking, Drug Use
- 1 in 4 Americans Now Struggling to Cover Medical Costs
- Getting Fitter Can Really Help Keep Dementia at Bay
- Skin Patch Could Monitor Your Blood Pressure
- There May Be a Better Way to Treat Hematoma Brain Bleeds
- Chronic Joint Pain Plus Depression Can Take Toll on the Brain
- Living in Space Won’t Permanently Harm Astronauts’ Thinking Skills
- Kids’ Injuries in Sports and at Home: When Is It Right to Seek Medical Attention?
- Human Cell Atlas Will Be ‘Google Maps’ for Health Research
Every Kiss Begins With 80 Million Germs
A kiss isn’t just a kiss: It’s also an opportunity to transfer millions of germs.
That’s the word from new Dutch research that suggests 10 seconds of lip lock can translate into 80 million germs moving from one person to the other. And two people who smooch a bunch of times each day will end up sharing similar germs.
“Intimate kissing, involving full tongue contact and saliva exchange, appears to be a courtship behavior unique to humans and is common in over 90 percent of known cultures,” study author Remco Kort, from TNO’s Microbiology and Systems Biology department in the Netherlands, said in a BioMed Central news release.
Kort, an adviser to the Micropia museum of microbes in Amsterdam, added, “To our knowledge, the exact effects of intimate kissing on the oral microbiota [microscopic living organisms] have never been studied. We wanted to find out the extent to which partners share their oral microbiota, and it turns out, the more a couple kiss, the more similar they are.”
In one experiment, the researchers gave 21 couples a probiotic drink containing bacteria before they kissed. Swab samples afterwards showed the transfer of those 80 million germs.
The researchers also found that tongue germs were more similar among couples compared to people who don’t know each other.
But in the big picture, according to the news release, mouth germs play only a small part: The mouth is home to more than 700 types of bacteria, but the body houses more than 100 trillion microorganisms, which help with tasks like fighting disease and digesting food.
The study was published in the journal Microbiome.
More information
For more about bacteria, try the Society for General Microbiology.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.