Release date: 2014-11-19 Recently, a study published in the journal Microbiome found that a kiss of up to ten seconds can transfer 80 million bacteria. A partner who kisses at least nine times a day shares a similar group of oral bacteria. In our body, there are more than 100 trillion microbes living in food. They are the key to food digestion, nutrient absorption and disease prevention. They are determined by factors such as heredity, diet, age and environment. In the mouth, there are more than 700 kinds of bacteria, which are affected by people who are closest to us. The researchers surveyed 21 couples asking them to fill out a questionnaire about kissing behavior, including the frequency of average kissing, and then analyzed the composition of oral microbes in their tongue and saliva. The results showed that when the couples kissed at a relatively high frequency (at least nine times a day), their salivary microbiota became very similar. In addition, the researchers examined the amount of bacterial transfer during the kissing process; one member of each couple drank a probiotic drink containing a specific type of bacteria, including lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria. After kissing for ten seconds, the researchers detected a three-fold increase in the number of probiotics in the saliva of a person who had not previously taken a probiotic drink, totaling 80 million bacteria. This may sound a lot, but the mouth contains about 1 billion bacteria, so maybe it's not that terrible. In addition, the researchers also found a very interesting phenomenon, in which 74% of men reported a higher frequency of kissing than his wife; in addition, the male reported data was an average of 10 kisses per day, while the average female daily Only five times. Source: biodiscover Puyang Linshi Medical Supplies Co., Ltd. , https://www.linshihealths.com
Recently, a study published in the journal Microbiome found that a kiss of up to ten seconds can transfer 80 million bacteria. A partner who kisses at least nine times a day shares a similar group of oral bacteria. The researchers also found a very interesting phenomenon in which 74% of men reported a higher frequency of kissing than his wife.