Gum Disease vs. Heart Disease
Gum disease and heart disease are not the same condition, but they share inflammatory pathways. Periodontitis raises cardiovascular risk by 2–3× because oral bacteria and inflammatory cytokines circulate from inflamed gum tissue into the bloodstream, accelerating arterial plaque and clot formation.
Key Facts
- Adults with periodontitis have 2–3× higher cardiovascular event risk
- Live oral bacteria (notably P. gingivalis) have been recovered from arterial plaques
- Treating gum disease measurably improves endothelial function within weeks
- The American Heart Association recognizes the association but does not yet call it causal
How They Connect
Periodontitis creates a chronic open wound in the gum pocket. Through it, bacteria and inflammatory mediators (IL-6, TNF-α, hsCRP) enter the bloodstream continuously. These same mediators drive endothelial dysfunction — the earliest step toward atherosclerosis — and increase platelet stickiness, raising clot risk.
Are They the Same Disease?
No. Heart disease is the dysfunction of cardiac tissue and coronary arteries. Gum disease is bacterial inflammation of tissues supporting teeth. They share inflammatory biology but are distinct diagnoses, treated by different specialists.
What the Research Shows
Meta-analyses spanning more than 100,000 patients show consistent association between periodontitis and coronary heart disease, even after adjusting for smoking, diabetes, and age. Intervention studies show that intensive periodontal therapy lowers hsCRP and improves flow-mediated dilation — both proxies for cardiovascular risk.