№ 44 · BIOLOGY
Diabetes and oral health: the two-way relationship nobody discusses at the appointment
June 13, 2026 · QDRO
A dentist knows something about diabetes that most endocrinologists do not discuss: the state of the mouth affects glycaemic control. This is not a metaphor — it is a bidirectional biological relationship confirmed by systematic reviews. Diabetes worsens gums. Inflamed gums worsen diabetes. Treating one improves the other.
Diabetes → periodontitis: the mechanism
Hyperglycaemia disrupts several protective mechanisms in periodontal tissue:
Protein glycation: elevated glucose leads to accumulation of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs). AGEs alter collagen in the periodontal ligament, impair vascular function, and amplify inflammatory signalling.
Neutrophil dysfunction: in diabetes, neutrophils — the first line of immune defence against bacteria — migrate and kill bacteria less effectively. This allows periodontal pathogens to proliferate more aggressively.
Microangiopathy: a typical diabetic complication affecting gingival vasculature. Reduced blood flow slows healing and immune response.
A systematic review (MDPI Diagnostics, 2023) analysing 53 observational studies found that type 2 diabetes increases the risk of developing periodontitis by 34% (OR 1.34; 95% CI 1.26–1.42).
Periodontitis → diabetes: the reverse relationship
This is the less obvious side — and it is what makes the relationship clinically significant.
Chronic inflammation from periodontitis triggers a systemic pro-inflammatory response: TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β. These cytokines suppress insulin signalling — receptors become less sensitive. Additionally, bacterial endotoxins (LPS) from periodontal pathogens stimulate the same cytokines through systemic circulation.
A systematic review and meta-analysis (PMC10572398, 2023) evaluated the association between periodontitis and HbA1c in non-diabetic patients. Result: periodontitis was associated with elevated HbA1c; periodontal therapy reduced HbA1c by 0.36% (95% CI: 0.20–0.52%).
A 2025 narrative review (PMC12209262) synthesised evidence on HbA1c in the bidirectional relationship. Conclusion: severe periodontitis increases type 2 diabetes incidence risk by 53%, and periodontal treatment reduces HbA1c by 0.3–0.5% on top of medication.
A 0.3–0.5% reduction in HbA1c is comparable to adding a second-line glucose-lowering drug. Achieved through treating gums.
How diabetes affects the oral cavity
Diabetes impacts the mouth through several additional mechanisms:
Xerostomia (dry mouth): diabetic neuropathy, polyuria, and some medications reduce salivary flow. Saliva is the primary natural defence against caries and candidiasis.
Oral candidiasis: diabetics have higher rates of oral Candida albicans colonisation — particularly when glycaemic control is poor.
Impaired healing: dental procedures heal more slowly when HbA1c is above 7.5%.
Burning mouth syndrome: some patients with diabetes experience oral burning or metallic taste, possibly related to neuropathy.
The practical takeaway
For a patient with diabetes:
- Tell your dentist about the diagnosis — it affects treatment planning, anaesthetic choice, and healing expectations.
- More frequent professional hygiene — every 3 to 4 months rather than 6, when gum inflammation is active.
- Manage dry mouth — hydrating gels, frequent water intake, alcohol-free mouthwash.
- Understand the bidirectional link: improving oral hygiene is not only about teeth — it indirectly supports glycaemic control.
Sources:
- PMC10572398 (2023). Periodontitis and HbA1c in non-diabetics: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Oral Health
- PMC12209262 (2025). Role of HbA1c in bidirectional periodontitis-diabetes relationship: narrative review
- PMC8774037 (2022). Mechanisms of bidirectional diabetes-periodontitis relationship. Int J Mol Sci
- MDPI Diagnostics (2023). Bidirectional relationship between periodontal disease and diabetes mellitus
- Preshaw PM et al. (2012). Periodontitis and diabetes: a two-way relationship. Diabetologia. PMID 22057194