In the single hospital study, researchers at the National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Centre in Japan, observed stroke patients to gain a better understanding of the relationship between hemorrhagic stroke and oral bacteria.
Among the patients who experienced intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), 26 per cent were found to have a specific bacterium in their saliva, cnm-positive Streptococcus mutans.
Among patients with other types of stroke, only 6 per cent tested positive for the bacterium.
Strokes are characterised as either ischemic strokes, which involve a blockage of one or more blood vessels supplying the brain, or hemorrhagic strokes, in which blood vessels in the brain rupture, causing bleeding.
They found that the number of CMBs was significantly higher in subjects with cnm-positive S mutans than in those without.
The S mutans bacteria may bind to blood vessels weakened by age and high blood pressure, causing arterial ruptures in the brain, leading to small or large hemorrhages, researchers said.
The cnm-negative S mutans bacteria is found in approximately 10 per cent of the general population, and is known to cause dental cavities (tooth decay), they said.
"The study and related work in our labs have shown that oral bacteria are involved in several kinds of stroke, including brain hemorrhages and strokes that lead to dementia," he said.
The findings were published in the journal Scientific Reports.
