I don't, a modern WH will have a swirling action when it fills to help with stuff settling on the bottom.
Are you noticing any grit or such in your hot water?
if it's an old heater you may wish to check on the condition of the dip tube, there were a lot of bad dip tubes at one point that ended up dissolving inside of the HWH's over a long period of time and that is an issue of its own.
The curve at bottom of dip tube helps stir sediment up when you drain the tank. Otherwise, it does nothing to prevent accumulation of sediment--when water flow stops in the heater, the stuff settles on the bottom.
If you running a gas heater, sediment accumulation will cause a 'popcorn popping' sound effect. The sediment acts like a blanket on the tank bottom, causing local overheating of the metal till it creates a burst of steam, giving the popping sound. That will shorten the lifespan of the tank bottom.
If sediment gets high enough to cover lower element in an electric heater, the lower element will burn out. The heater will still run, but capacity will drop to about half or less.
Changing out the plastic gate-style valve to a brass ball valve is worthwhile if you plan on getting sediment out. A ball valve is a lot more robust than the plastic, and you can 'rod it out' with a
coat hanger when the sediment clogs it (I've seen chunks of stuff that resembled gravel and shell
fragments like you'd see along the surf line at the beach!). Swapping in a ball valve is best done on your *next* heater, btw--depending on condition of tank/nipple, unscrewing the plastic valve may start a leak.
BTW, the defective dip tubes didn't dissolve--the broke into pieces that could cause all kinds of headaches. That was more than twenty years ago, so they're probably out of circulation by now.
Anode rod replacement is the way to go to preserve tank life. You can find em on Amazon for about $15 a pop. I knew a guy that retired from AO Smith, who talked a lot about water heaters. He said you'll see the ballyhooed 'glass lining' when you flush the sediment--glass about as thick as a light bulb. He said the glass linings were "all broke before they left the factory."
Reminds me I'm due for checking mine out!