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🦷 PDF Prevention Guide · $37

Oral Health & Your Heart: What Your Mouth Reveals

Severe periodontitis is associated with 2-3x higher cardiovascular risk. Oral bacteria have been found in coronary plaques. And infective endocarditis — life-threatening valve infection — has oral bacteria as a leading cause. The mouth-heart connection is real, and this guide covers all of it.

✓ 4 pages✓ Periodontitis-CVD link✓ Infective endocarditis✓ Medication-dental guide✓ PDF download
$37
One-time purchase · Instant PDF download
  • 4 proposed biological mechanisms of oral-cardiac connection
  • Infective endocarditis — who needs antibiotic prophylaxis before dental work
  • Practical oral health protocol for cardiac patients
  • Complete cardiac medication effects on dental health
  • What to tell your dentist before every procedure
  • Evidence-based daily oral hygiene for cardiac patients
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91% of cardiovascular disease patients in one study had oral health problems

Cardiology and dentistry have historically operated in silos. Patients see a cardiologist for their heart and a dentist for their teeth — rarely understanding that decisions in one office affect risk in the other. Stopping anticoagulants for dental work can trigger cardiac events. Gum disease left untreated elevates systemic inflammatory markers. Certain cardiac conditions require antibiotic prophylaxis before dental procedures.

This guide gives cardiac patients the integrated knowledge to manage both simultaneously — including the specific conversation to have with their dentist at every visit.

What’s inside

2-3x
Higher CV Risk
Severe periodontitis associates with 2-3x higher cardiovascular risk across multiple large studies
17-20%
Endocarditis
Of infective endocarditis cases are caused by oral streptococcal bacteria
91%
CVD-Oral Link
Of cardiovascular disease patients had oral health issues in a major cross-sectional study

“The mouth is part of the cardiovascular system in a way most patients do not appreciate. I ask about dental health at every new patient visit. Severe periodontitis, tooth loss, and frequent oral infections are signals that belong in a cardiac risk assessment.”

CN
Dr. Christabel Nyange, MD, MPH, FACC
Founder, ElinMed · Board-Certified Cardiologist

Common Questions

Do I need antibiotic prophylaxis before dental work?
Only specific cardiac conditions require prophylaxis: prosthetic heart valves or valve repair material, prior history of infective endocarditis, certain unrepaired or incompletely repaired congenital heart defects, and cardiac transplant with valve disease. If you have any of these conditions, tell your dentist before every procedure — amoxicillin 2g orally 30-60 minutes before is standard. If you are unsure whether your condition qualifies, ask Dr. Nyange.
Should I stop my blood thinner before dental work?
Almost certainly not — at least not without Dr. Nyange's guidance. Stopping warfarin or antiplatelet therapy for dental work carries a risk of cardiac events (stent thrombosis, stroke in AFib patients) that typically outweighs the bleeding risk of dental procedures. Most routine dental work including extractions can be performed safely within therapeutic anticoagulant range with local measures (pressure, hemostatic agents). Always coordinate between your dentist and Dr. Nyange before stopping any cardiac medication.
My gums bleed when I brush. Is that normal?
No — healthy gums do not bleed with normal brushing or flossing. Persistent gum bleeding is a sign of gingivitis or periodontitis and warrants dental evaluation. This is especially important for cardiac patients because: (1) periodontitis elevates systemic inflammatory markers; (2) certain cardiac medications can cause gingival overgrowth; and (3) anticoagulants may mask more bleeding than would normally occur, making the underlying gum disease harder to self-assess. See your dentist.

Your dental health is your cardiac health.

The intersection most patients — and many physicians — have never been taught.

Get Oral-Heart Guide — $37