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Articles Dental Health and Your Health Gum Disease How To Preventative Care
Sebo Marketing October 15th, 2021

What you should know about Gum Disease:

 

How to Treat Gum Disease:

  • Maintain Proper Homecare  Brush & Floss Daily and diligently, you must effectively remove the plaque every day at home.
  • Commit to Regular Dental Checkups You must come for cleaning and maintenance visits with the dentist or hygienist every 3 months.
  • At the office, we will provide the help you need in terms of diagnosis, advice, encouragement, and motivation to get you on the right path and keep you there, even, and especially, if you stray occasionally.
  • In addition, we will provide the professional services, from SRP to more advanced surgical procedures, as needed.
  • Gum Disease is Controlled not cured. Once active gum disease is controlled, you are a healed periodontal patient. That means that, although you do not have active gum disease now, we recognize your inherent biological susceptibility to gum disease and urge you to review this summary on a regular basis.
  • Please note that we cannot guarantee that the solutions offered here are definitely applicable to your condition since we have not examined your mouth. However, if you know the solutions that are generally applied to dental problems, you will be much better informed and will likely make better decisions in your own dental health care.

If you think you have Gum Disease make an appointment today. Don’t wait until it hurts, get it under control now!

What You Should Know About Gum Disease:

Do your gums bleed easily? Perhaps they are very red, swollen or tender? Are you embarrassed about bad breath?

How Severe is Your Gum Disease? It will determine your plan of treatment.

Treatment for gum disease depends on the degree of severity. The earliest stage (gingivitis) has an infection in the gum tissue but the disease process has not spread down into the bone. More advanced stages, such as periodontitis, where bone damage has occurred, require different treatment. And gum recession, where gum tissue is lost, exposing tooth roots, also requires different treatment.

There are several types of periodontal diseases. All are started by a bacterial infection which attacks the gums, bone and ligaments that support the teeth and hold them in the jaw. > Click here to learn the different stages of gum disease.

Gum Disease is treatable, but not curable:

Gum disease, whether it is the early stage of gingivitis or a more advanced stage of periodontitis, cannot be cured in the same way a disease like pneumonia can be cured. Pneumonia, once successfully treated, eliminates the presence of the bacteria that caused the disease. It is very likely that a person who is successfully treated for pneumonia will never get it again. They don’t need to do anything special once the disease is gone, and the bacteria probably won’t come back. Gum disease is very different. The bacteria that cause gum disease cannot be eliminated permanently. They are likely to remain in a person’s mouth forever, waiting for their next chance to penetrate the patient’s defense systems.

Why it is so important to brush & floss daily:

In any stage of gum disease, from earliest to most advanced, the first step is to control the bacteria in your mouth. Unfortunately, you cannot take an antibiotic to kill the germs permanently. Even when the dentist prescribes a course of antibiotics for an acute gum abscess, we know that the germs will start to return within a few weeks. Therefore, the starting point for all patients, and we know you hate it when we tell you, is brushing and flossing to remove the germs from in-between the teeth and along and under the gum line.

The bacteria that cause gum disease will always be in your mouth. But it is only when they form clumps between the teeth and under the gum line that gum disease occurs. The same bacteria that cause gum disease cannot cause a problem on your lips and tongue because they don’t build up undisturbed. Also, the tissue is thicker and stronger on the outside of your gums than the thin delicate tissue under the gum line.

Brush and floss your teeth daily to help ensure the wellness of your teeth.
> Click here to review brushing and flossing and then return here to continue.

Brushing and flossing are usually sufficient for patients whose gums are healthy or who have the earliest stages of gum disease, as long as they are effective in removing the plaque. However, some patients just aren’t as effective with brushing and flossing. Also, patients with more advanced gum disease or gum recession might need some extra help with controlling the germs in the plaque in their mouth. Also, some patients have orthodontic braces or fixed bridgework that make effective flossing harder to do. These patients can benefit from a Rotadent toothbrush, an end-tufted brush, a proxi brush, super floss, floss threaders, or a Hydrofloss dental irrigator.

There are so many different types of products out there. You spend so much money on products that might not even work. We have some recommendations for the best products and we also keep some in the office for our patients, along with detailed instructions for proper usage.
> Click here to go to learn more about recommended products

How To Treat Gum Disease:
Maintain Proper Home Care & Commit to Regular Dental Checkup

First: Your job is to use the devices recommended by your dentist or hygienist to control the plaque on a daily basis at home.
Second: You must come for dental cleanings and inspection visits every three months so the dentist and hygienist can remove any plaque you might miss and monitor your progress.

Remember, gum disease cannot be cured. It can only be controlled.

As you have learned, some people have lower resistance to gum disease. Some people’s mouths provide a friendlier environment to the germs that cause gum disease. Anyone who has had gum disease is never cured. We refer to them as a “healed perio patient”. That means that, although they do not have active gum disease in their mouths right now, we recognize their heightened susceptibility and their need for meticulous home care coupled with regular and consistent professional supervision.

Not just anyone can treat Gum Disease, Dental Care of Stamford is trained in Peridontal Care:

We might add here that not all dentists have the training to provide these services and not all dental offices have the equipment and personnel to do this, but we do! Now, let’s look at the procedure the dental office must provide in order to treat active gum disease.

In the case of earlier gum disease, such as gingivitis or early periodontitis, the first course of action by the dentist or hygienist is Scaling and Root Planning (SRP). The objective of SRP is to eliminate bacterial plaque and calculus (tartar) build-up deep under the gum line, where home care and even regular cleanings won’t reach. In addition, it is designed to eliminate the infection and gum pockets so the gums can heal. If the gum disease is too advanced for SRP to completely heal the pockets, then a surgical procedure to remove infected gum tissue or to recontour the gum line may be needed.

In addition, more advanced procedures such as bone grafting may be needed to manage the bone loss of advanced gum disease.

And lastly, there are procedures to graft receded gum tissue as well. Sometimes they are done in conjunction with bone grafting and sometimes they are done separately. > Learn about gum grafting to repair receded gum tissue.

 

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