Chronic Kidney Disease & Oral Health
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and periodontitis worsen each other through chronic systemic inflammation. Adults with severe periodontitis have a ~60% higher rate of CKD progression, and dialysis patients with untreated gum disease have higher cardiovascular mortality — the leading cause of death in end-stage renal disease.
The Connection
Periodontitis raises CRP, IL-6, and oxidative stress, all of which accelerate glomerular damage. Conversely, uremia from declining kidney function reduces salivary flow, raises pH, and changes the oral microbiome — increasing calculus, periodontitis, and oral candidiasis risk.
Why Coordination Matters
Nephrologists should add a periodontal assessment to the standard CKD workup, and dentists should track GFR alongside HbA1c at recall visits for at-risk patients.
What to Watch For
- Persistent metallic taste
- Heavy calculus build-up
- Dry mouth and burning mouth sensation
- Pale gums or oral pallor
Frequently Asked Questions
Does gum disease damage the kidneys?
Periodontitis does not directly destroy nephrons, but the chronic inflammation it produces accelerates the glomerular damage of underlying CKD. Severe periodontitis is associated with ~60% higher CKD progression.
Why do dialysis patients have such bad teeth?
Uremia reduces saliva and shifts oral pH, calcium-phosphate balance is disturbed, and many medications cause dry mouth — all of which accelerate calculus, gum disease, and decay.
Should kidney transplant candidates have a dental clearance?
Yes — most transplant centers require pre-transplant periodontal clearance because immunosuppression after transplant can turn an oral infection life-threatening.