Gum health: what the research says about prevention and treatment
Gingivitis, periodontitis, receding gums, water flossers, and the day-to-day habits with the strongest evidence base.
Gum disease progresses in stages, and the earliest stage, gingivitis, is fully reversible. The problem is that most people don't recognize it until it's crossed into periodontitis, where damage to the bone and connective tissue becomes permanent. The gap between "my gums bleed sometimes" and "I need surgery" is often just a few years of ignored inflammation.
The good news: the interventions that work are neither exotic nor expensive. Consistent mechanical plaque removal (brushing plus interdental cleaning), reducing systemic inflammatory drivers (smoking, uncontrolled diabetes), and regular professional cleanings prevent the majority of cases. Everything else, mouthwashes, probiotics, natural remedies, is adjunct at best.
The guides below cover both the biology (what actually causes gum disease) and the practical decisions (which tools help, when to see a dentist, what home remedies have real evidence). We cite primary research for every claim.
Guides for this topic are on the way. Check back soon, or explore other topics below.