Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - What Your Mouth Is Trying To Tell You: The Hidden Connection Between Oral Health & Chronic Disease with Dr Victoria Sampson #511
Episode Date: January 15, 2025When you think about improving your health, do you ever think about the health of your mouth? If you heard last week’s episode with Dr Emily Leeming, you will know just how important your gut microb...iome is, for many aspects of your health, but did you know that your mouth also has its own microbiome, and the health of it is just as important?  Today’s guest is Dr Victoria Sampson, a functional dentist and researcher based in central London, whose work has been recognised all over the world, resulting in her becoming a scientific advisor and clinical lead to several international dental companies, as well as a topical team member of the European Space Agency and NASA. She has published numerous scientific papers, was the first dentist in the world to link gum disease with worse COVID complications. She also recently launched her own oral microbiome test, Oralis 1, which assesses the saliva for bacteria, inflammatory markers, and genetic mutations.  In this fascinating conversation, Victoria reveals why we must stop treating the mouth as separate from the rest of the body and explains how the oral microbiome - home to 700 different species of bacteria - influences everything from our blood sugar control to the health of our hearts.  She also shares compelling research showing how treating gum disease can improve our blood sugar levels, why men with poor oral health are nearly three times more likely to experience erectile dysfunction, the relationship between the oral microbiome and autoimmune disease, the surprising link between oral health and fertility and so much more.  Throughout the conversation, Victoria shares practical tips that we can all use immediately to improve our short-term and our long-term health.  Whether you're dealing with persistent dental problems despite good hygiene, managing a chronic health condition, or simply want to optimise your wellbeing, this conversation offers a powerful reminder that the path to better health might just start in your mouth. I hope you enjoy listening.  Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. This January, try FREE for 30 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore. For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com.  Thanks to our sponsors: https://www.eightsleep.com/livemore https://www.boncharge.com/livemore https://drinkag1.com/livemore  Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/511  DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey guys, how are you doing? Hope you're having a good week so far. My name is Dr. Rangan Chatterjee
and this is my podcast, Feel Better, Live More.
When you think about improving your health, do you ever think about the health of your
mouth? Well, if you heard last week's episode with Dr. Emily
Leeming, you will know just how important your gut's microbiome is for many aspects
of your health. But did you know that your mouth also has its own microbiome and the
health of it is just as important?
This week's guest is Dr. Victoria Sampson, a functional dentist and researcher based
in central London, whose work has been recognised all over the world, resulting in her becoming
a scientific advisor and clinical lead to several international dental companies, as
well as a topical team member of the European Space Agency and NASA. Victoria has published numerous
scientific papers. She was the first dentist in the world to link gum disease with worse
COVID complications. And she recently launched her own oral microbiome test, a RALIS one,
which assesses the saliva for bacteria, inflammatory markers and genetic mutations.
In this fascinating conversation, Victoria reveals why we must stop treating the mouth
as separate from the rest of the body, and explains how the oral microbiome, home to
700 different species of bacteria, influences everything from our blood sugar control to
the health of our hearts.
She also shares compelling research showing how treating gum disease can improve our blood
sugar levels, why men with poor oral health are nearly three times more likely to experience
erectile dysfunction, the relationship between the oral microbiome and autoimmune disease,
the surprising link between oral health and fertility and so much more. And of course, throughout the conversation, Victoria shares
practical tips that we can all use immediately to improve our short term and our long term
health. Whether you're dealing with persistent dental problems despite good hygiene, managing a chronic health condition,
or simply want to optimise your wellbeing. This conversation offers a powerful reminder
that the path to better health might just start in your mouth.
You say that the mouth is the gateway to the rest of the body. What is it that most of
us don't understand about the mouth that you would like us to know?
I think that for decades we've always thought that the mouth is a completely separate entity
to the rest of the body. So doctors and dentists go to different universities, they study different things,
and doctors are kind of like, oh, that's a mouth issue, that's for the dentist.
And the dentist is like, oh, that's an arthritis issue that has nothing to do with me.
But actually, if you rewind from long, long before,
Hippocrates actually thought that there was a really strong connection
between the mouth and the rest of the body.
And he actually claimed that he took a tooth out and he helped improve someone's rheumatoid arthritis.
So at that time, we knew that there was a connection, but then there's been this kind of separation between medicine and dentistry
because of universities and the way that we've been trained.
And I think in the most recent kind of five or 10 years,
there's more and more research starting to come up
that actually if you want to improve your general health,
you have to factor in your oral health.
And if you have, for example, something like gum disease,
you also need to be looking at other systemic conditions
that could be connected to it.
There's so much to unpack there that we'll get to throughout this conversation. Just
to really ground this for people at the start, what kind of physical health conditions that
people may be familiar with can be linked to the health of our mouth?
So I say the most researched one is diabetes. So there's a very strong bidirectional relationship
between diabetes and gum disease,
but also things like cardiovascular disease,
even chronic kidney disease, infertility,
Alzheimer's, arthritis,
a lot of other inflammatory conditions,
and the list goes on.
Cancer as well?
There has been some promising research, particularly for colorectal cancer, where they found a
specific oral bacteria called Fusobacterium nucleatum in over 50% of patients who have
colorectal cancer.
And they're finding also specific strains of that bacteria, which are making certain
cancers more pathogenic and more aggressive.
Okay. So the health of the mouth linked to lots of different conditions that you've mentioned.
Okay. So let's get to where most people I think are in society with how they view their health
and their oral health. Okay. So they might go, as you've said, go see the doctor for their physical
health and maybe their mental wellbeing as well. But you go somewhere separately for
your teeth and many people are scared of going to dentists. Many people don't go as often
as perhaps they should. But I think, or I'd like to think that most people, and perhaps
you could enlighten me on this, I think most people are brushing their teeth twice a day,
two minutes in the morning, two minutes in the evening.
Is that true?
No, actually, unfortunately it isn't.
So gum disease or periodontal disease
is the sixth most prevalent inflammatory condition
in the world.
And the World Health Organization came out quite recently saying that actually gum disease
is entirely preventable, but it affects over 3.5 billion people in the world.
And over 10% of the global population has periodontal disease.
So I think that, I don't think people are brushing twice a day or if they are, they're
not doing it correctly.
Because another issue is that the way that we get taught
how to brush our teeth and take care of our mouths
are often passed on by our parents.
And if our parents don't have very good habits,
then they'll pass that on to us.
And unfortunately, dental professionals,
a lot of them are not necessarily teaching people
how to brush their teeth.
And even when I sometimes I'm like,
can I show you how to brush your teeth? People are like, I know how to brush my teeth. I even when I sometimes I'm like, can I show you how to brush your teeth?
People are like, I know how to brush my teeth.
I'm like, but you actually don't.
And you're not brushing for two minutes.
You're not spitting out the toothpaste
and not rinsing with water.
And so a lot of people actually don't know
how to do it properly.
Yeah, this is super fascinating.
So let's go into this because a lot of the things
that I talk about in this podcast are, I guess
they're health related. They're about the simple things that we can all do each day
that are going to have a huge impact on our short-term and our long-term health. Now,
let's take the topic of nutrition, for example, which of course is relevant to the mouth.
I've often wondered if one of the problems is, is that we have so many nutrition experts
these days, i.e. in a different time where we didn't have all of this ultra processed
food and convenience foods, we didn't really get educated on nutrition. We just ate what
our families and our cultures ate. Okay. So we'd learn the good principles of healthy
eating from our family and what we saw growing
up.
And you're saying that that's in some way similar, whereby we observe how our parents
and our family and the people around us when we were kids looked after their teeth and
we learned that.
So I grew up in an Indian family and many Indian families eat with their
hands. And I remember mum and dad after eating would always rinse their mouth because they
would, you eat with your right hands. Okay. They'd finish eating. And so then you put
the plate in the sink, they'd wash their hand. And as part of the washing the hand process,
they'd put water in the palm
of their hands and they'd rinse two or three times.
The more I've learned about oral health over the last few years, I think, wow, that's actually
a pretty phenomenal practice because you're taking the food out or those remnants straight
away after each meal.
So what's your take on that cultural practice that I observed growing up?
I actually think that there are some cultures who they knew how to do things without maybe
even knowing that they were doing it well. And that's amazing. I didn't even know that.
But even now, we often recommend to patients that if they're having like a bad treat or
something like sugary or acidic, that they rinse their mouth out with water or even mouthwash.
But they never actually go and brush their teeth.
Because if you go and have something super acidic and then you run to the bathroom and
you brush your teeth, you're just going to grind all that acid into your teeth.
So rinsing with water is actually perfect.
You said 3.5 billion people on the planet have some form of gum disease.
Yep.
That's almost half the world's population.
Why is it what's going on in the modern environment that means so many of us are struggling?
That's a big question to answer.
I think it's obviously it's multifactorial.
I think one is fine, potentially lack of education on how to take care of your gums well, because
as the World Health Organization said, it is entirely preventable.
The second is, again, like you said, a lot of people don't necessarily acknowledge or
appreciate how important their oral health is for the rest of their body.
So they might not prioritize going to the dentist,
spending money, going and having a hygiene. The number of patients I see where I'm like,
oh, you should be having a hygiene, a minimum every six months. And they're like, like,
that's a waste of money. Like, it has such a strong impact with everything else.
That's a really interesting point, isn't it? Whereby, when we think about health, we might
persuade ourselves, you know,
I know physical activity is good for me. I keep hearing all these longevity experts telling
me it's the most important thing. And you might go, actually, you know what? Yeah, I'm
going to sign up and join the gym, let's say. Right? So there's a model in society for making
that connection, isn't there? Where we go, oh yeah,
muscle strength is important as we get older, we must do some resistant exercise. I can justify
signing up for a gym. Now, depending on where you live, obviously gyms can range anything from,
I don't know, 15 quid a month to maybe 100 quid a month, you know, maybe even more for some real
high-end ones. How much is a standard hygienist appointment-ish privately?
And I know you work in London, but across the country, do you know roughly?
I would say from what I have seen, it can vary between 50 pounds to maybe the highest I've seen
is like a hundred and actually 200. So depending on where you are in the country, if it's NHS or
if it's private. But not incomparable, if that was done twice a year,
not incomparable to gym membership or maybe cheaper.
Yeah, yeah.
And there's been so much research to actually show
that even for example, just one professional hygiene,
it can reduce your levels of inflammatory markers.
If you have diabetes,
it can reduce your blood glucose levels or your HbA1c.
And so- Just from seeing a hygienc. Just from seeing a hygienist.
Just from seeing a hygienist and having a regular hygiene because a lot of people also
they think that hygiene is more of an aesthetic cosmetic treatment.
It's just to remove stains and to make them feel fresh.
But actually you're reducing someone's bacterial load, you're reducing their inflammation and
you're reducing these retentive factors.
So things like calculus, that hard stuff
that you get on the insides of your teeth,
that is trapping lots of plaque and bacteria
and causing the inflammation.
Okay, so when you say a hygiene,
this is going to see a hygienist to get your teeth cleaned.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Okay, you said something very interesting there.
Well, you said more than one thing very interesting there.
Okay, the first thing is that we think about our teeth
and our gums through the lens of looks, right?
Which is again, just to draw the analogy
with physical health, a lot of people initially
are bothered about going to the gym
or working out for vanity reasons, okay?
And you know, I get that, I totally get that, right?
But people are learning more and more
that it's not just for vanity, it's not just to
have a lean body or a body that you like the look of, it's also important for your hormones,
for your longevity.
And so we can draw that analogy again, can't we, with our teeth.
It's so much more than just having nice teeth that look good, which of course everybody
wants.
It's so much more than that.
So let's talk about the oral microbiome, right? Because everyone who listens to my show, I
think by now is quite familiar with the gut microbiome. There's also an oral microbiome
that you are, I would say, one of the leading experts in for what I can tell. So can you
explain what is the oral microbiome? And then let's start to unpick how the health of the mouth,
for example, can impact your blood sugar control?
So the oral microbiome is the second largest and most diverse microbiome after the gut.
People actually say that they're extensions of each other and the oral microbiome has
over 700 different bacteria in it, which make up two billion bacteria.
What's quite interesting about the oral microbiome
is that within the same mouth or ecosystem, let's call it,
you have lots of different environments.
So if you think about the bacteria
that would want to live under the gums or on the teeth
or at the back of your throat,
they're very different environments.
Some are hot, cold, different proteins.
And so therefore you get different mini environments
within the same ecosystem
with lots of different types of bacteria.
So it's a very highly variable microbiome
and it is quite strongly associated
with the rest of the body because you can swallow bacteria and it can travel actually through your blood via your gums or it can be inhaled as well.
Wow. So type 2 diabetes, you said, if someone has that or let's say, even if they don't,
right, let's just, I guess I'm trying to help people understand, you said before that actually if you go see
a hygienist, it could potentially improve your blood sugar control.
Yes, yeah.
So I think that's brand new information for a lot of people.
So they've actually done a study, it was mainly for patients who had periodontal disease at
this point.
Okay.
And they found that by treating the patient's periodontal disease, who also had type 2 diabetes,
their HbA1c reduced by 0.4%.
That's a lot.
Yeah, I was going to say for a lot of people they're like, oh, that's nothing.
I'm like, no, that's the equivalent of a patient having a second medication put on top to help
reduce their HbA1c levels.
Yeah, or depending on where you are, that could take you from being pre-diabetic to
no longer being diabetic. So it's pretty profound 0.4. Okay, so do we know how this works?
So there's a couple of different kind of mechanisms. A lot of it's to do with reducing your inflammatory
load. So your mouth and your microbiome, if you have gum disease, what happens is that
you have high levels of certain bad bacteria and they release inflammatory markers and
those inflammatory markers can travel through to the rest of the body and cause something
we call low gradegrade chronic inflammation.
So it's this kind of constant firing of inflammation from the mouth elsewhere to the rest of the body.
And it's been shown that it has a strong impact with your blood glucose levels
and helping to regulate it as well.
If we just look at this through the lens of blood sugar,
it kind of relates to what you said right
at the start of this conversation, which is we've for far too long kept the body and the mouth
separate. What's really interesting there for me is that in that study, they already had
pre-existing problems in the mouth, right? So that was potentially
driving inflammation around the body. And so when you correct that, you start to, you
know, correct other issues in the body that are also coming from that inflammation. And
that could be blood sugar control. We see similar things, don't we, with the gut microbiome?
You know, a lot of the research over the last 10 or 15 years has been very much about how, wow, we're now seeing that a unhealthy gut microbiome,
for want of a better term, so I think we're still trying to define what that actually is,
is linked with all kinds of different things. You know, Alzheimer's, cancer, rheumatoid arthritis,
depression, skin problems, all those things.
And for me, it just speaks to this wider point, which is the body is interconnected.
Massively. Yeah. And I think for one day, not yet, but one day, we will connect the
oral, gut, vaginal, urine, all the microbiomes, and we will actually understand what true
health is because
it's a complete symbiosis and ecosystem.
And in my opinion, you can't have a balanced gut microbiome if your oral microbiome was
imbalanced and you can't have a balanced vaginal microbiome if your gut microbiome, you know,
it all has to be balanced for it to work properly.
And then following on from that, then through the lens of just blood sugar, how can we properly
look after our patients with pre-diabetes or type 2 diabetes if we're not also addressing
their oral health?
100%.
Yeah.
And I think that one of the issues that I see is actually from the medical profession, a lot of them are not aware that periodontal disease is such a big risk factor for diabetes and complications.
So actually we now say that periodontal disease is the seventh complication of diabetes.
After your diabetic foot and your nephropathy and neuropathy, all of those things,
gum disease is also one and it's bidirectional. So if you have diabetes, you're at a much higher chance of getting
gum disease. And if you have gum disease, you're at a much higher chance of getting
diabetes.
The gut-brain axis is something we often talk about on this show, this bi-directional communication
between gut and brain. And I had Emily Leeming on a few weeks ago, microbiome expert who was saying that it looks
as though 90% of the messages in this gut-brain axis are going from the gut to the brain and
only 10% are down from the brain to the gut.
I've been diving into your research over the past 24 hours or so and it's really fascinating
and it made me think that as we think about gut brain access, we perhaps should be thinking
about mouth brain access as well, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And even oral gut brain access as well.
Yeah.
So do we have any research so far as to what it means, you know, the health of our mouth,
how that relates to our brain health?
Yeah, so there's been a lot of research, particularly in the last maybe five to ten years, on cognitive
decline and Alzheimer's and again, periodontal disease.
So what a lot of research is finding is that patients who have Alzheimer's, they have checked
their, they've looked at their cerebral spinal fluid and they have found a specific oral
bacteria called porphyromonas gingivalis in over 97% of these patient samples compared
to healthy patients where they don't have that oral bacteria in their cerebral spinal
fluid.
And if we actually zoom into this bacteria,
so P. gingivalis, we see that P. gingivalis
is a very aggressive, not a nice bacteria.
And there are some strains of that bacteria
which can release what we call virulence factors.
And they're basically, it's kind of like a bad guy
shooting something out of the gun
and it's bad things
that they're shooting out basically.
So these virulence factors have also been found to be much higher in patients who suffer
from Alzheimer's.
And these virulence factors specifically are called gingipains.
And again, gingipains have only been found in patients who suffer from Alzheimer's and
periodontal disease in their cerebral spinal fluid.
So this is more of an association or correlation.
There has been a lot of research to look more into the causation between potentially Alzheimer's
and gum disease.
And one which I think does start to show it is, okay, fine, you already have Alzheimer's,
but would actually improving your periodontal health
or your gum health reduce your cognitive decline?
And so this study looked at patients
who already had Alzheimer's,
they had half the group who had gum disease
and the other half that did not have gum disease,
and they followed them for six and 12 months.
And they found that the patients who had gum disease and Alzheimer's had a much more rapid cognitive
decline than those who didn't have gum disease.
It's so fascinating. There's a neurologist in America called Professor Dale Bredesen
who has done some quite remarkable research on Alzheimer's and early stage cognitive decline
and can this be reversed? And he has shown that in some individuals, if you take a different
approach to what is the standard medical approach, you can actually get some pretty outstanding
outcomes. I've actually spoken to some of the patients and families and seen and gone
and helped him actually on it. There's an immersion about, I don't know, six, seven years ago. It's really quite
remarkable. One of the things he would look at and make sure we're addressing is that
oral health.
That's great.
Yeah. It's really good because I think you're doing a great job, I think, at bringing light
to this research and hopefully by you coming on here and sharing it, it's going to get to more people. I think there are some quite progressive clinicians around
the world who've known for a number of years that there is a strong link. And so Dale's
approach without Thomas, for example, is he would say the standard medical model is to
try and hit the symptoms with one approach, a drug. And he's not saying that that can't work.
He's saying, or he said,
and I don't want to misspeak for him today,
that let's say you've got a leaking roof in your house.
And he says, in Alzheimer's,
they've identified 36 possible leaks, right?
So he says, using just one drug
is like trying to address that leak by just addressing one
of the holes.
And so his approach is let's address as many holes as we can and let's see if we can get
a threshold effect where this starts to improve someone's cognitive decline.
So that might be they address diets, they might address, you know, ketone production
and all kinds of different things, right?
Toxic load in the body, addressing all of those things and also your dental health. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know if you heard
about any of this work or not. I have actually. And also, so there's a charity called Food
for the Brain, which I'm an advisor for and I'm there kind of their mouth representative
and they're doing quite similar work as well, where again, they're
showing that Alzheimer's is a multifactorial disease, and just one drug is not going to
treat it.
But also what I find quite unique about oral health out of those risk factors is that it
is entirely preventable and you can change it.
So for example, if you go and you check your genetics and you find out that you have the APO4 gene, you can't really change much about that. But if you were to go and
look at your oral health and you find out that actually you have gum disease or you
also maybe have really high levels of porphyromonas gingivalis, this bad bacteria, then you know,
okay, I need to reduce that and I need to get rid of maybe that porphyromonas gingivalis and there are ways to do it.
You can test your microbiome.
You can go see your dentist and see if you have gum disease.
I've been sort of super fascinated in gut health maybe since, I don't know, 2012.
So really keeping an eye on the research and seeing
what's happening. And what's been really interesting to me is seeing how things have evolved. So
things that we thought were problematic in the guts, let's say blastocystis hominis,
for example, right? I remember the school of thought maybe eight, nine years ago is
if you do your gut microbiome, do a stool test, get it examined, and there's blastocystis hominis,
many practitioners were trying to try and kill that. They go, actually, this is a problem.
We don't want this parasite in your gut. But over the years, the school of thought has
started to evolve and going, actually, it seems as though that can be helpful for some
people at reducing their risk of autoimmune disease. So I guess my question is, where are we at the moment
with the state of research in the oral microbiome? Because I've seen things change a lot with gut
health and what we think is good and what we don't think is good. Like even this idea that a diverse
gut microbiome is healthy. When I spoke to Emily, I said, how do we actually know that?
Do we know for sure that that is the case?
And I think there's a lot we still don't know.
So where do you think we are currently with
what we know about oral health and the oral microbiome?
I think it's a great question
because I think that gut microbiome is ahead of the curve.
It's the one that's had a lot more attention compared to the oral microbiome is ahead of the curve. It's the one that's had a lot more attention
compared to the oral microbiome.
And in terms of the oral microbiome, it's quite similar.
We don't still fully understand whether or not
a diverse microbiome is healthier than a undiverse microbiome.
And so a lot of research teams, including my own team, that we have a lab and we're doing a lot of research teams, including my own team,
we have a lab and we're doing a lot of research,
we're actually trying to look at clinical parameters.
So we're looking at patients,
we're seeing what is healthy in their mouth,
and then kind of pairing that to their oral microbiome.
And what we have started to realize
is that it's not just necessarily the balance
or ratio of bacteria in your mouth,
which will dictate whether or not it's healthy.
It's also to do with certain strains of bacteria.
So me and you, we can have the same bacteria,
but I might have a very virulent aggressive strain,
which is releasing loads of virulence vectors.
And you might have a very, very good,
you know, non-pathogenic, very good bacteria.
So we also, we need to go strain level.
And the second thing, which I think is the most important
is that it's also how your body responds to that bacteria.
So it's that host immune response element to it.
So again, me and you,
we can have exactly the same oral microbiome
and have all the same bacteria,
but I might end up having terrible gum disease
and lots of decay, and you might be completely fine.
And we see this a lot where we see patients who say,
you know, I brush five times a day
and I take such good care of my mouth,
but I have terrible gum disease.
And that missing link is those genetic mutations,
it's that host immune response, and how inflammatory
that person is.
So I might have the smallest amount of bad bacteria,
I might take very good care
of my hygiene, but my body responds in a very aggressive way, which has been determined
by my genetic makeup.
Wow. Super interesting. So you do a lot of oral microbiome testing. If you had never seen a patient, but you got their results, do you think that you know
enough about the oral microbiome now to actually start building up a picture of who that patient
is and what they might look like?
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If you go to bondcharge.com forward slash live more and use the coupon codes live more, We're definitely not there yet for systemic diseases, so things like cognitive issues
or diabetes or heart disease through the oral microbiome.
It's something that a lot of people are working on at the moment.
In terms of oral diseases, like your gum disease or your decay or even bad breath, I think that we are actually in a good place where we can,
I would not say diagnose, but we could definitely flag up people who are at risk of gum disease or decay.
And there has been a ton of research to show that there are certain bacteria
which we know cause gum disease or we know cause decay. So for example, at our lab, we have been working for two years
nearly on building an algorithm.
So we actually have built an algorithm where we incorporate
the patient's dental history, what they do at home,
how much they're brushing, flossing, their age,
their medical history, as well as the bacteria they have,
the genetic mutations, the inflammatory markers, all together,
to then give them a risk of their oral diseases.
And I wouldn't say, I don't have like a specificity
of saying, okay, we're 100% accurate,
but the way that we've done it is by testing
all of our patients and then seeing, okay,
were we right with our prediction or were we not?
So I would say we are very much on our way to getting there for oral diseases.
You know, there's a phrase, something like what gets measured gets addressed or something
like that, right? So, I guess when I hear about this oral microbiome test, I'm thinking,
let's say someone doesn't have any toothache or any over symptoms from their
mouth, which is encouraging them to go and change their lifestyle or change their diet
or go and see the dentist or the hygienist.
If they had an oral microbiome test that showed, oh, there's a few issues here.
I wonder if that might be a good way going forward for some people to start taking their
oral health seriously.
Yeah.
So we've actually just got our preliminary results.
We did a questionnaire, like a survey, and we sent it out to everyone who's done our
oral microbiome test.
Just to say like, how likely were you to go and book an appointment with your dentist
or your hygienist after getting your results? And we had an over 90, I think it was a 95% success
rate which had gone to the dentist within one month of taking the test or getting their
results basically. And I think that shows that I think the issue with oral health as well
is that it's always been something that dentists know
and we kind of tell our patients what's wrong
and patients don't understand what is going on.
So we're like, you need three fillings,
you need one root canal and you've got gum disease.
And patients are like, but why do I have all of these,
you know, cavities and how did I get gum disease?
And they don't understand that gum disease is a,
it's a bacterial infection. It is increasing
your inflammation and it's traveling through the rest of their body. They just think it's
something cute, you know?
This is so fascinating to me, right? So, because I'm, as I'm hearing all of this in my, in
my head, I'm sort of superimposing it on other principles that I try and adopt and share
with people. So let's go through this
in real time, right? I'm thinking that, let's say blood sugar, because we mentioned that
already and metabolic health is a topic that I've covered on multiple occasions and will
continue to cover on multiple occasions because it's so important for our short term and our
long term health. Okay. So I've shared many times that one of the issues
I have with the way that we practice medicine today is that the way we report results is
very black and white. And we don't recognize as a profession enough or we certainly don't
inform our patients enough that health exists on a continuum. So let's take average blood sugar. You mentioned
HbA1c before and you shared that study where if they had periodontal disease and they treated
it, on average their A1c went down by 0.4, which is remarkable. Okay, so just to ground
people in the UK, if your HbA1c, which is your average blood sugar marker for the past two to three months, is 6.5 or
above.
We call that type 2 diabetes.
6 to 6.5, that's pre-diabetes and under 6 is considered normal.
Now, I would argue that 5.9 is anything but normal.
It may not be in the pre-diabetic range, but we should not be reporting it as normal, but
it commonly is.
Right.
So if we try and use that model for what you're saying, is there a similarity with dental
problems?
So by the time you have gum disease, that's like your A1C is 6.5 or above, right?
So, oh, now you've got a problem.
I'm going to come and see Dr. Samson and get this sorted.
But are there earlier indications,
which is showing us actually,
you don't have gum disease yet,
but things aren't where they should be.
Does that analogy work?
Yeah, yeah, fully.
I actually love it.
I think we should start using it more.
We should say like your pre-periodontal disease.
Yeah.
So like, you know, so yes, you're totally right.
Periodontal disease is kind of like a spectrum, I call it.
So, on one side, you've got super healthy,
everything's amazing gums.
And then on the other side is you've got severe periodontal disease,
your teeth are falling out, you've lost all of your bone,
it's really bad.
But actually, within, along that spectrum are lots and lots of different types of kind of gum disease
where it starts as healthy gums, then it becomes inflamed gums, so that's the patient who brushes their teeth
and their gums bleed a little bit. At that point, they should be thinking, this isn't great, I should go and see their dentist.
And if they don't go and see their dentist, then that will progress and they'll
get even more gum inflammation.
And if that still isn't addressed,
then that becomes gum disease.
And the gum disease, what marks it
is that you start getting bone loss.
So it's not just gum inflammation anymore.
You're actually also losing bone around the teeth.
And as you lose that bone around the teeth,
the gum disease progresses and gets worse and worse,
eventually resulting in tooth loss.
The annoying thing with gum disease is the only real,
I would say, warning sign, early warning sign,
is bleeding gums, which a lot of people don't think
is a warning sign, and they should think that it is.
How common is bleeding gums?
Very, very, very common.
I don't know the exact statistic, but I would say it's definitely over 80% of patients will
have experienced bleeding gums at some point.
Is that patients who come and see a dentist?
So in your experience, about 80% of your patients have complained of bleeding gums?
Or do you think even across a general population, it might be something as high as that?
I think across a general population, they will have experienced bleeding gums at some point in their life.
And you're saying that bleeding gums, generally speaking, should not happen.
No, I mean, if you had your eye was bleeding, you'd probably be a little bit worried, right?
You probably go and see your doctor or if your foot, your nail kept on bleeding
and there was pus coming out of it,
you probably want to get that sorted out.
But when it comes to the mouth,
we often don't know if we have pus coming out of our gums
because you can't really taste it very well.
And bleeding gums people think is just entirely normal.
Why is it do you think that if we had a bleeding eye,
we go and see the doctor, but we don't with the bleeding gum?
What is there a PR problem with dentistry?
Is it the fear that many people have when their kids are going to the dentist?
What is it?
Because when you put it like that, it's quite obvious.
A part of your body is bleeding.
There's no obvious cause for it, like a cut, which we understand, oh, you know, I cut my foot, it's going to bleed. Why don't we do that for our
math?
I don't know. I think it is a PR problem. I think dentistry needs to hire a very good
PR firm.
That's what you're here for.
That's what I'm here for.
You're doing PR a dentistry. But I think it's a lack of importance.
People don't think that your mouth is that important.
And then on top of that, I think people
don't trust their dentist.
They're scared of their dentist.
Or they're like, oh, it's bleeding.
I'll just brush harder.
Or I'll just start using mouthwash.
Why are people scared of the dentist?
I think that stems from there's a big thing about vulnerability.
And I know a lot of people feel extremely vulnerable when they're in a dental chair
and they're laying back and they've got someone else's hands in their mouth.
It's a very invasive thing.
And it doesn't help that in the previous decades,
dentists were seen or known to be pretty heavy-handed,
and there have been some bad experiences for patients.
And it still happens to this day, I'm sure.
But I think that, you know,
I've heard some terrible stories from patients now
who are like, oh, when I was 10 years old,
every time I went to the school dentist,
I'd have a tooth taken out, or I would have a filling,
and there was no anesthetic.
And so they get that in their head
They teach it to their kids and I see it all the time where these parents are like, oh no
You're going to the dentist like you'll get chocolate afterwards
I'm like no you're teaching your child to think that the dentist is a bad thing and we can be great
You can be really fun sometimes
So we can be a real party.
Give us a chance.
But that's a really good point.
Actually, it's a really good point.
I think people don't think about enough and I go into this area with caution because I
know it's what's what you just said there has so many implications as a parent.
What are we teaching our kids?
What do I want my kids picking up from me? I don't want them picking up all the kind
of insecurities I may have had. I actually don't want that for them. And so that was
my biggest drive to actually change a lot of this stuff. And so let's go back to dentistry
then. People are scared to go often because of that.
Why? What are some other reasons? I mean, do you see people sometimes who come to you for the first time and you see the state of their mouth and you're like, how come you weren't here five years
ago? Do you sometimes see mouths in a pretty awful state? Yeah, I had one patient quite recently and
the weird thing about him was that on the outside,
he was so well dressed.
I mean, amazing three piece suit.
I mean, like beautiful tie, everything.
And he comes in and he probably hadn't gone to the dentist in like 20 years.
He smoked like 40 cigarettes a day.
And he basically didn't really have any teeth left. And his teeth had fallen out.
And sorry, this is a bit gross for some people,
but he would then put the tooth back into the hole
that it was in previously,
so that when he was talking to people,
it looked like he had teeth, but he couldn't eat.
And he would always eat at home or without people,
and he would take all of the teeth out of his mouth and eat.
And so I think this is just the, such a prime example of someone who clearly takes
very good care of themselves and, you know,
aesthetics are quite important to them,
but they are terrified of the dentist.
And I think it's a self-perpetuating cycle
where they think that the dentist is going to judge them.
So then they keep on not going
and then it gets worse and worse.
And they don't really trust us either.
That's a great point.
Fear of judgment, right?
Because if you know you haven't been looking after your teeth particularly well,
for whatever reason, or you've been indulging in a bit too much sugar for whatever reason,
right?
Which many people do, especially when they're stressed.
Maybe that fear of judgment stops people going as well,
because I actually don't want that dentist to look.
It's, you know, I never really thought about this,
very vulnerable, doesn't it?
You're opening that part of your mouth
that nobody gets to see really.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, the number of patients who have cried in my chair, who have gum disease
and I think they think that it's their fault.
They've been told they've been blamed by others, by other dentists or hygienists and being
like, you're not brushing well enough, you're not taking care of your mouth.
And I think it stems much larger than that of how that patient was educated and whether
or not they had the money to go see the dentist. There's so many factors that could cause that patient
to be in that place and it's unfair to be judged for that.
But it is an extremely emotional thing.
And actually one of my patients,
when she said she was like every part of your body,
if you have a problem or you have some sort of trauma,
you can hide it.
But in your mouth, your mouth shows so much.
You can actually get a lot of trauma and scars,
and we can always see it.
So for example, if a patient was bulimic
when they were younger, I can see that, I know that.
If they maybe didn't have a childhood
where they ate very good food
and they weren't taking good care of their teeth,
they will have lots and lots of decay and lots of fillings.
And so it's interesting because you can tell a lot from someone's mouth.
And I think that some people do feel like they're going to be judged for that.
If we think about this through an evolutionary lens, do we know
the state of dental health in more traditional societies. So, if we look at through the lens
of the gut microbiome, we'll often talk about the Hadza tribe in Tanzania, whose lives are
still relatively untouched by modernity. So, gut microbiome researchers will go there and
study and look at their stool and see what's going on. And yes, we see that actually a lot of them have much more diverse microbiomes
than we do in Western urban populations. Has that been done yet for our oral microbiomes?
Like do we know the state of their health? You know, because it's striking to me that nearly
half the planet have some form of gum disease. I imagine that wasn't the case in traditional
societies or was it?
So in terms of oral microbiome studies, there have been a lot to compare different societies,
for example, just even comparing different diets in different countries, more westernized
diets versus others who are not.
So yes, we have been able to compare that,
but what I'm not aware of is studies from maybe
communities which are very non-industrialized
or haven't had kind of more processed foods in their diet.
There has been a lot of research
by a guy called Weston Price.
And he did show that there was a significant change
in the mouths of people who were in areas
which were less industrialized compared to areas which were.
So they had twins, for example,
one who was having lots of kind of processed foods versus the other twin who was not having processed foods.
And the way that their jaws developed, the amount of decay that they had were massively different.
Yeah, it's remarkable, isn't it?
Because if you think about a lot of these ultra processed foods, they're softer, they're easier to chew.
So that if we think about it, you know, we know, for example,
our bone density, let's say in our legs, you know, is going to be heavily influenced by
the amount of pressure you're putting through, you know, walking, running, jumping, all these
things are putting pressure on the bone and the bones growing back stronger. And I guess if your child is having a lot of soft, mushy, ultra processed foods,
they're not getting that kind of mechanical stimulus to the jaw and the teeth. Is that
what we're seeing?
Yeah. So they're showing that the jaw is not developing as much because you're not using
the jaw under the pressures that it's meant to. So even it goes from as early as like breastfeeding to even as they grow older, whether or not
they're having processed foods.
And so a lot of people are now trying to teach their children to eat harder foods.
I've even seen like there's these gadgets that they're giving their children to like
chew on so that they like develop their jaws. chew on so that they develop their jaws.
I would not go that far.
I think just make sure that your child
has quite a balanced diet
and they're having things like hard, crunchy carrots
just to help develop their jaws a little bit more.
Yeah, or even, I appreciate not everyone eats meat
for a variety of different reasons,
but if you do, chewing, trying to get that
meat off the bone, that's again, you're giving it a mechanical stimulus. You know, it's going
to have an impact on your bone health and your mouth, your dental health. It's pretty remarkable.
Let's go into this 3.5 billion statistic, right? Because I can't get it out of my head.
and statistic, right? Because I can't get it out of my head. Why is it that so many of us are struggling today with our oral health? Right? It's remarkable. If I think about human
evolution, something so important, you're calling them out the gateway to the rest of
the body. You mentioned the link between fertility, cancer, Alzheimer's, autoimmune illness. And
I'm sure the list goes on and on.
We've mentioned some of the reasons we don't come and see the dentist, but what's going
on in the modern lifestyle? Maybe we can talk about food, sugar, tea, coffee, all these
sort of things. I mean, can you sort of walk us through the things that are helpful and
the things that are potentially harmful if we don't pay attention?
Yeah. So I think, again, if you go into like the Stone Age times,
there hasn't been much evidence to show that people had lots of decay or lots of gum disease,
but they also didn't have hygienists and dentists and they weren't getting root canals done.
So what was so different about their diet compared to what we're doing now?
And part of it is that they were having hard, chewy foods.
They weren't having sugar.
There was no processed foods.
They were not snacking.
They were eating as and when food was there.
And then you come to our society now
where a lot of our foods is processed.
A lot of us do snack and snacking is one of actually
the worst things for the mouth in particular
because every time you snack, your saliva,
the acidity of the saliva will become more acidic.
And as the saliva becomes more acidic,
then the teeth can demineralize and then you can get decay.
So I always say to patients, you know, if you're a sweet tooth,
I mean, obviously you can probably tell them that they shouldn't be having sugar.
I will tell them that if they are going to have their sugar,
have it all in one go, just once,
and then have some water afterwards, and that is it.
So if you have a bag of Skittles,
I'd rather you ate the whole bag of Skittles in one go,
then you ate a Skittle every five minutes or so.
Because what happens is the saliva's not able to neutralize,
and then it just stays in an acidic state,
and that's when you start getting demineralization and decay.
Yeah, that's so interesting. Okay, so just so no one misinterpreted that, you're not
recommending that someone goes and has a whole bag of sweets, whatever that brand might be.
But what you're saying is, if you are going to, because the truth is some people are. Yeah.
Because people eat for a variety of different reasons, not just physical hunger, emotional
hunger is often a big driver of our eating habits.
You're saying that sort of steady, constant drip of sugar throughout the day is not allowing
your mouth to rebalance basically.
Exactly.
And that's the same with drinks as well.
So if you're someone who has some sort of sweeteners
or something in your water, or you're having fizzy drinks,
we're all human, we all have bad things.
In my opinion, that's how you have that bad thing
and what you do to basically get back into a good
and healthy state.
So if you're having your Coca-Cola,
have it all
in one go, don't sip it and drink some water afterwards and also drink it through a straw
as well, the Coca-Cola.
Okay. There's so many little practical things you put in there. Let's go through them one
by one. Okay. So sugar. I think a lot of us know or are aware that sugar or excess sugar
is not going to be helpful for our teeth. Okay. So sugar comes in a variety of different
forms. You mentioned that we can drink sugar, which I don't think they were doing in traditional
societies. We can drink a lot of sugar in a very short period of time. We can add sugar
to our tea or we can have sugar in sweets or a biscuit, whatever it might be. So let's
just make it really clear for people,
because everyone's got a different relationship with foods.
Maybe we'll start out with a hot drink with sugar in it.
Through the lens of our dental health,
we're not talking about diabetes or weight or anything like that,
through the lens of our dental health, is that OK?
So it has been shown that when the drink is hot and you've got the sugar inside it, then
it also will exacerbate the acidity of the saliva.
So it'll make it even more acidic and it will be more difficult for that saliva to rebalance
again.
So hold on, just so I'm clear.
So let's say you had a hot beverage in front of you and you had on a teaspoon some sugar. For your dental
health, are you saying you're better at putting the sugar straight in your mouth and swallowing
it and then having the hot drink separate? Are you basically saying that when the sugar
is dissolved in the hot drink, it becomes more problematic. Yes. Yeah.
So that's been shown to be more problematic,
because it's hot, I guess.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's super interesting.
OK.
What about fruit juice?
That's also pretty bad as well.
Just even and dried fruits as well.
So again, that's where, I guess, there's
kind of conflicting, supporting arguments
because fruit juice and dried fruits are good for your general health,
but they're actually quite bad for your dental health.
So you should be following the same rules of, you know, have it all in one go.
Don't snack on it.
So if you're having dried fruits, for example, I always recommend to mix it
with maybe some nuts as well so that roughage can help get rid of the whatever dried prune
that is stuck in your teeth.
Okay. So let's say someone has indulged in something sweet for whatever reason. What
is the best thing they can then do to reduce the potential problematic effects on their oral health, the teeth, their
gums, the gut bugs, not the gut bugs, the mouth bugs that we want in there. What are
some helpful things that they can do?
So like I said, have it all in one go. Straight after you can just rinse it with some water.
Straight after.
Yeah, straight after.
They may not want to do that because they probably like the aftertaste. They're like no, stay. You can chew some sugar-free
gum and just by chewing sugar-free gum, it helps to stimulate your saliva and that saliva
will wash away whatever's stuck in your teeth, but also will help to neutralize the saliva
quicker. There's also some really cool like mints and pastels
which have probiotics or have alkaline solutions
to help neutralize the saliva as well.
So you can even pop one of those in afterwards.
Okay.
Let's look at this through another lens.
We all live different lives.
We all have different taste preferences. We have different times that
we eat. But I don't know if you would engage in this thought experiment. What does the perfect
day look like from a dental health perspective? With the understanding that this may not be
achievable, but I'm just wondering what
might not perfect, but really good dental health look like.
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OK, so you wake up in the morning.
For some patients, they might be taking off their mouth tape.
So that's something which is relatively newer that people are learning about.
To help encourage nasal breathing.
Exactly, yep.
And stop introduction of bacteria and drying the mouth out.
So they're taking off their mouth tape or if they already breathe with their mouth closed,
then fantastic, wake up.
And then they will go brush their teeth.
And then afterwards they might have some breakfast,
ideally something which is not sugary,
so maybe they're having just some porridge or some eggs.
And then this is me, for example,
so and then I'm going to get my, I have a coffee,
and then I get to work.
I usually will have a, like a neutralizing mint
at that point as well.
So that just helps to freshen my breath.
I am a dentist, so I want to make sure
that my breath smells nice, but then also just
helps to neutralize everything.
And then I will have lunch, rinse my mouth with water
after I've had my lunch.
So you do that.
That's interesting.
I actually do, yeah.
And then I will have my dinner.
By the way, I don't drink anything other than water during the day or coffee, so there's
no sugar involved.
And I note that you're also not snacking on this ideal day.
Yeah, so I really try not to snack.
And then I will have my lovely dinner. And then I'll wait a minimum of 30 minutes after my dinner
before I go and brush my teeth.
And usually I first will floss
and then I will brush my teeth.
And then I will not rinse with water.
I'll just spit out the toothpaste, no rinsing.
And then I personally will pop in a probiotic pastoral.
So I have like a probiotic mint before I go to sleep.
And that's that.
Okay.
This is fascinating.
Okay.
Thank you for sharing that because I'm now trying to plot that out and what I could potentially
apply.
Okay.
So let's just go through that, right?
So mouth tape.
We have covered this before, but if people haven't heard my initial conversations with James Nester
and a few others about mouth tape, they may not be familiar.
So, we're talking about a practice that some people can do to help encourage them to breathe through their nose at night.
Yes.
Why is nasal breathing, and you sort of covered it, but just to make it super clear for people,
why is nasal breathing
through the night important for your oral microbiome?
So if you're breathing with your mouth open, you're introducing bacteria into your mouth
for however many hours, but more importantly, your mouth dries out completely.
And saliva is so, so, so important for oral health.
And so people who have a dry mouth, be it because of medications they're taking or certain
medical issues that they have, it is really important for them that they try and lubricate
their mouth as much as possible, be it through mouth taping or whatnot.
So it is really important for that.
And we've actually seen a lot of patients, and this is just in my own clinic,
who were originally mouth breathers.
And we actually went and fixed their jaws completely
or their teeth and how they meet
through orthodontic treatments.
My sister's an orthodontist.
So she'll fix that.
And then they don't even need to mouth tape
because their lips will close at rest
in a much more comfortable way
and they don't breathe with their mouth open.
Yeah, that's really interesting.
So sometimes the mouth breathing that many of us are doing
at night is a consequence of our jaw placements.
Exactly, yes.
And then we've also done microbiome testing of patients before and
after they've had their orthodontic treatment or whatnot. And we've seen that there's been
a really big improvement in their gum health, in obviously their saliva production and also
their oral microbiome as well.
This is fascinating. So again, drawing the analogy with our guts, people are so interested
in what they can do to improve their gut's health.
And there are things you can do with your food, but there's also things with your stress
and sleep and movement that also impacts our gut's health, right?
So the things that we can do to improve our oral health and the bugs in our mouth that
we want, simply going from mouth breathing to nasal breathing at night,
in and of itself, is going to make a positive impact.
Yes.
And I always recommend to patients that they start with mouth taping and they'll probably
feel a significant improvement in how their mouth feels, maybe how they're sleeping, their
focus and concentration the next day.
And if they do feel those significant improvements, they might be more inclined
to go ahead and do maybe some orthodontic treatment to fix their teeth.
When my wife first did mouth taping, and I think it was after my
second conversation with James Nester on this podcast, because, you know,
she probably won't listen to my advice, but she'll listen to James giving
that advice, which I think is the thing in all relationships. But when she did that,
it was remarkable.
Really?
Yeah. She's like, I've got so much energy. The following day, after the first time, her
energy was through the roof. So for some people, it can be game changing. But that was from
an energy perspective. It's
fascinating to me that that can also improve the health of your oral microbiome, which kind of
makes sense when you start to think about it. Okay, you said you would on this idea or there,
you'd brush your teeth straight away. Yes. There's no real difference whether you brush
your teeth before or after breakfast. For me, it really depends on what you're eating for breakfast.
Or if you're someone who's going to have an orange juice and you like your sugary cereal,
then it's actually better to brush your teeth before you have your breakfast because you
shouldn't brush your teeth straight after having anything acidic or sugary.
Otherwise you grind into your teeth.
So a lot of people wake up with bad breath.
Okay.
So one of the incentives for people to brush their teeth, I would say is yes, how it's
going to look, but also they want their breath to smell nice.
Right.
A lot of people will have coffee or tea in the morning.
If they don't brush their teeth, I don't know, let's say they even have a glass of water
when they wake up.
Yeah.
Are there bugs in the mouth
that are maybe contributing to bad breath?
Maybe we've been mouth breathing all night
and we've got a slightly dysbiotic oral microbiome
and so we have a slightly unbalanced one.
If you then consume things like water or tea or coffee
without brushing or rinsing your mouth,
are some of those, you know, inverted commas problematic bacteria going then into your body?
Or do we not know?
We don't know, or I don't know.
What I do know is that most oral bacteria, a lot of them are not going to survive in the gut.
Stomach acid.
Yeah, it's the stomach acid. So it's only really like very, very bad, bad bacteria from
the mouth, which are even going to survive. And those bad bacteria are not going to just
find themselves all of a sudden in the middle of the night and then be swallowed and cause
a problem. That's much more of a slower long burn. So it's the reason you think or do you advise
people brush their teeth straight away? Is that for any particular reason or is it just habit?
It's kind of be easy, you know, you get up, maybe go to the toilet, you brush it at the same time,
so it's done. It's like for me, it's more habit and whatever is easiest for the patient. Like I said,
there's no real difference between brushing before or after your breakfast, as
long as your breakfast is not a super sugary, acidic breakfast.
Okay.
So there are some other cultural practices, which I'm aware of, that I think are relevant
here.
So in Ayurvedic medicine, which is traditional Indian medicine, there's two things that are
often done. Number one, oil
pulling. I don't know if you're familiar with this practice or not, where first thing in
the morning you would put some coconut oil in your mouth and swirl it around for anything
from either two minutes to 10 minutes, depending on how much you want to do it, spit that out,
rinse your mouth. And so I think, and I'm not an Ayurvedic practitioner, I think the
thinking is that you are removing
some of those kind of impurities or the bad bacteria that are built over the night before
you start consuming things.
The other practice that I think a lot of Indian families do is tongue scraping.
So I remember mom and dad literally every single, you know, they'd brush their teeth
and it's a no-brainer.
You just, you know, you scrape your tongue afterwards with these metal tongue scrapers
and you know, when we go to India every other summer for six weeks, we'd come back, we'd
go to the local market and come back with like 30 of these silver metal tongue scrapers.
Right?
So I don't know, again, I don't know if these things have been studied or not.
And if they haven't, it doesn't mean they don't work just because we haven't studied them. But I find it interesting that those practices
do exist certainly in Indian culture. I'm sure other cultures have their own practices
as well. Do you know much about those two practices and their potential benefits?
Yes. So thanks for reminding me because I actually would recommend tongue scraping and
that is part of my routine. So if we start with tongue scraping,
it is actually very beneficial.
You need to be quite careful with how aggressive
and how often you scrape your tongue.
Because what can actually happen is if you tongue scrape too aggressively,
you can cause overgrowth of the filly form or the buds on your tongue.
And that can make your tongue, it's not very nice,
it's called like a hairy tongue.
So you can have a hairy tongue, black hairy tongue,
and that can actually trap even more bacteria
and it's like this self-repetuating cycle.
So I would always recommend to patients
that they do tongue scrape with the Ayurvedic
metal tongue scraper, maybe a couple of times a week,
not every single day and not very aggressively.
The coconut oil pillings one,
I have a lot of patients who swear by it
and they say that it has changed their life.
But if we look at the actual evidence behind it,
there is no research that I'm aware of
that shows that it has any direct improvements to someone's oral health.
And a lot of it is more anecdotal.
But with that being said, like I said, a lot of my patients love it
and there's no harm.
So all of this research has shown that there's no positive gain from it,
but there's also no harm from doing it.
And if you actually want to be doing coconut oil pulling correctly,
you should really be doing it for, I think it's about 15 minutes.
So for most of my patients, I don't recommend it just because I like to keep things really,
really like just brush your teeth twice a day, like as quick and easy as they can.
And a lot of people can't do that for 15 minutes, but some people have found that improves their
hydration in their mouth.
They say that their teeth feel whiter.
They have less ulcers.
So definitely if you're listening and you want to try it out, go for it.
Have you seen then some studies looking at this?
There have been studies that looked at it and they haven't found any statistically significant improvement in any oral health parameters.
But there's also no negative to it either.
I know it would be interesting to know what they actually studied and how long for.
And I've got a few friends who are dentists and a couple of them have said to me, anecdotally,
the patients who have done it or do it regularly, their teeth look really good.
Now that doesn't mean it's that that's doing it.
There could be other practices, of course, as well.
And again, my bias is that that's a practice that I've seen in my culture growing up and in my family.
So it's fascinating, isn't it?
Okay, so back to your perfect day.
You have scrape your tongue because it's one of those two occasions a week where you do it on this day.
You already mentioned that you try your best not to snack and we've covered why that is.
You also said that on this day that you would rinse your mouth after your lunch. Okay.
Why is rinsing your mouth after food such a good practice if you're able to do it?
Just helps get rid of the bacteria and the food. Sorry. It's just as simple as that.
Just if you've got food stuck in your teeth or your mouth, you just rinse it out and it
helps.
Yeah.
Okay.
Flossing.
You said in the evening you floss before you brush your teeth.
Is that just preference or is there a reason for that?
So there is no real difference between if you were to floss before or after you brush. For me, so over 30% of the bacteria is in between your teeth.
So when you're flossing, you're getting rid of 30% of that.
And there's always going to be some food and some stuff stuck in there.
So I like to floss, get rid of all of it, and then I brush and then spit everything out.
Whereas if you were to brush and then spit out your toothpaste and then
you were to floss, then you just have to spit out again. And it's just not as easy. So I
just find that I find that easier. And it's kind of weirdly quite nice to be like, ah,
you know, and take everything out. So yeah,
because you also like to keep the toothpaste in afterwards. So why do you keep it in?
So I always compare it to sunscreen.
So if you were to spend two minutes putting sunscreen
all over your skin, and then you were to have a shower
before you go out into the sun,
then you've just washed off all the goodness
and it's not going to do anything.
So it's the same with brushing your teeth.
You spend two minutes applying all that toothpaste
onto your teeth.
And if you were to rinse out with water,
then you're actually just removing all of
the goodness from the toothpaste out of your mouth. Is there a risk that some toothpaste and I'm no
expert on toothpastes but is there a risk some of them have got harmful chemicals in that maybe
are working in the short term to help our teeth look better but they're not necessarily the sort
of chemicals you might want for eight hours overnight whilst you're asleep on your teeth?
sort of chemicals you might want for eight hours overnight whilst you're asleep on your teeth?
So, yeah, so I would always try and avoid SLS in your toothpaste, so that's sodium lauryl
sulfate and it's a foaming agent. It makes toothpaste really foamy and nice and everyone
likes that, but actually it's been shown to not be great for the microbiome. It can strip
the soft tissues inside the mouth and make them
more irritated and can cause ulcers as well. So you don't need that. But
otherwise just spitting out is enough that you shouldn't have gotten all the
toothpaste all over your tongue and your cheeks anyway. You should just be
brushing your teeth and spitting it out is more than fine.
What's your take on mouthwash?
Mouthwash is good for some people, but not needed for most people.
In my opinion, it really needs to be kind of prescribed by a dentist.
For a particular problem.
Exactly.
For a particular problem, be it bad breath, gum disease.
Sometimes if you have lots and lots of decay, sometimes we'll also give you a mouthwash
for that. Isn't the downside though that some of them are, well, I know some contain alcohol.
Yeah.
So, you know, we mentioned at the start of this conversation, the importance of a healthy
oral microbiome, so a good balance of bacteria in our mouth.
Is there a risk that some of these mouthwashes are going to disrupt that balance?
Yes, yes, it definitely can. And that's why it's important that it's only used by certain
people if they have a certain problem. So for example, in my clinic, we will test a
patient's oral microbiome and we'll see exactly what bacteria they have high levels of. And
I can recommend a mouthwash, which would be more effective for that patient based on what bacteria they have. So we're not knocking out the whole microbiome and
killing everything.
Again, trying to draw these analogies to sort of concepts that people are familiar with.
Is that a bit like an antibiotic then where we wouldn't, you wouldn't just take an antibiotic
every day to stop yourself ever getting ill?
Yeah.
Because we know that that's going to be problematic, right? For your gut microbiome and all kinds of other things.
But a doctor will prescribe it for a specific problem for a discrete period of time.
Yeah, exactly.
Do you think we need to start thinking about mouthwashers in a very similar way?
Yes, definitely.
And even within that, no mouthwash that we recommend should have alcohol.
I mean, at this point in day, like we shouldn't be having alcohol in any of our mouthwashes,
and you can still get very effective mouthwashes without alcohol in them.
But yeah, definitely, it should be used if you have a problem to fix that problem.
And if you are someone who just has maybe, you just had something really garlicky,
and you're about to go on a date or something like that, fine. You can use some mouthwash, but you should use it like a perfume or an aftershave just to help
freshen the breath once or twice when needed.
Because some people are having it twice a day. It's part of their dental care regime.
And I would say, although I haven't seen anything recently, I think sometimes these things are
marketed like that, aren't they?
Yeah, they are.
Because of course, there's more sales if someone's using it twice a day than once every three
years when prescribed by a dentist.
Exactly.
And also, even if you are going to be using mouthwash, it should be at a separate time
to brushing.
So going back to the toothpaste analogy of sunscreen, if you were to brush your teeth
and then you rinse with mouthwash straight after,
then they actually kind of cancel out each other's effects,
the toothpaste and the mouthwash,
and you end up not really having anything.
So if you do have to use mouthwash,
you should use it at a separate time to your brushing.
So I always recommend like at lunchtime.
So after your meal, instead of rinsing out with water,
rinse out with whatever mouthwash you've been recommended to use.
If we look at the health of the oral microbiome then, and the things we can do to improve
it or keep it well. We mentioned food and drinks and some of the things that we can
do, right? Around that. We mentioned that nose breathing
at night as opposed to mouth breathing is something that's going to have a positive impact.
There are other things in our lifestyle that we know, for example, impacts our gut microbiome. So,
you know, I talk about these four pillars of health and have them for many years, food movement, sleep,
and stress management, right? We know that all
four of those independently impact the health of our gut microbiome. I wonder if we could
just go through them through the lens of our oral microbiome. We've mentioned food, as
I say, you mentioned nasal breathing. Stress and sleep, do we know what chronic stress
does to the health of our teeth and
our oral microbiome?
So stress definitely, it obviously increases your cortisol levels.
And actually one of the most tried and tested ways of testing your cortisol is through a
saliva test, which shows that saliva is an extremely valuable diagnostic tool.
That was just more of a fun fact.
But actually we're also seeing that if a patient is under a lot of emotional or
even physical stress,
then that can actually show itself within the mouth.
The patient can start getting gum disease. You can get lots of ulcers.
And it depends on what that stress is. So we do at our clinic, we do a test.
It's called a collagen breakdown.
So we've got lots of different types of collagen in our bodies.
And our gums are made out of a certain type of collagen.
And essentially gum disease is collagen breakdown.
But the problem with gum disease is by the time we can see it in your mouth or you're
having problems, it's kind of too late and the destruction's already occurred.
But we know from a biomolecular level
that collagen breakdown is happening
up to a year before in the saliva.
So we test our patients for their collagen breakdown
as a certain enzyme called AMMP8.
We test for this enzyme constantly, every patient,
and it kind of flags up patients
who are at risk of gum disease,
some sort of collagen breakdown.
But also what it shows is a patient who's under potentially
a lot of physical or emotional stress.
And that was something that I found really wild.
Wow.
So we started doing it.
I've probably been using this test for like five years now.
Started using it just to test people for gum disease.
And then I would get someone whose gums were actually really healthy,
but they had really high levels of this collagen breakdown.
I was like, I don't understand.
And they were like, oh, you know, I'm in the middle of chemotherapy
or, you know, one of the women, for example, perfect oral health,
but she just lost her child.
And those types of things can really have a massive impact
on our bodies
and definitely our mouths as well.
Yeah. Fascinating. I guess chronic stress can also directly impact teeth and jaw clenching,
you know, tension and all that sort of stuff as well as the kind of potential impacts on
gut. I keep saying gut bugs, mouth bugs. Yes. Yes.
And I guess that's one of your goals, isn't it?
To get this more front and center of people's minds.
Yes.
Yeah.
I think the first thing is for people to acknowledge and respect their mouths more and understand
that there's a really, really strong connection with the rest of their body.
And I want, you know, patients, I want doctors,
everyone to understand that.
Because I think that in our society,
where chronic diseases and inflammation is just on the rise,
we need to find the low hanging fruit
and the things which are easy to treat
that can reduce our inflammation like gum disease.
But my ultimate, ultimate goal is that one day we might be able to flag up patients who
are at risk of systemic diseases through their mouths and through saliva testing.
Yeah, fascinating.
Absolutely fascinating.
If we go back to this, this relationship between the mouth and the rest of the body.
It's really fascinating.
I've heard you talk before about the link between our oral health and our fertility
and for men erectile dysfunction.
So could you talk about some of those statistics?
What is that relationship?
So I think it just really highlights just how linked the health of the mouth is to the
health of the rest of the body. So for women, there's actually been a lot of research to show that women will actually
start to get gum issues during pregnancy.
It's a very common side effect of pregnancy.
It's what we call pregnancy gingivitis.
And if that is not under control, and if we go back to my spectrum of like very healthy gums,
and then you've got your inflammation, bleeding gums,
if that's not gotten under control,
then that can become gum disease.
And research has found that in women
who do have gum disease and are pregnant,
that they're at a significantly higher chance
of preterm birth and low birth weight of their babies.
Wow.
Yeah, so, and that's quite a strong, it's an easy thing again to treat.
So I'd always recommend for patients who are pregnant that they come and have a hygiene
every three months.
Even if they think their gums are great, just come and have a hygiene.
It's worth it.
Yeah, that's interesting.
Okay, so that's the link between it and preterm birth.
You mentioned some sort of hormonal associations there.
What about menstruating women in their cycle?
Does the health of their gums change throughout?
Or can it?
I wish I had more answers on that and it upsets me that they don't because there's not enough
research on it.
There's very little research on what we on menstruation mouth or on menopause
mouth, which is really sad. I would say anecdotally, I see a lot of women who are particularly
perimenopause and menopause, who start to get gum disease, or they get gum recession
and the consistency of their gums changes a little bit. They also might get lots of ulcers.
And then one that menopausal women often suffer from
is burning mouth syndrome.
And it's a really horrible syndrome or symptom.
It's basically their mouth feels like it's constantly on fire
and we don't see anything in their mouth,
but they often can't eat a lot of foods,
they are constantly in pain,
even brushing their teeth can hurt them.
And at the moment, we don't even have a solution
or a cure for this.
And we don't even know how it's caused,
but there are so many women who have it.
The only thing that has been shown is that sometimes
if a woman in her perimenopausal stage
controls her hormones better, maybe through HRT or whatnot,
there has been shown to be a lower chance
of that woman getting burning mouth syndrome
when she's menopausal.
So maybe that's suggesting that the hormonal fluctuations
increases the risk of burning mouth syndrome, but yeah.
Yeah, hopefully there'll be more research into that.
Yeah, there needs to be it like really because at the moment all that we recommend is often patients are put on
antidepressants and that will help with their pain. But I just think that's, this is just a personal thing. I just think that's just wild. That's not fair to tell a woman who's
menopausal to take antidepressants because her mouth feels like it's on fire and we can't
see it. So I really hope that there's more research that comes out.
What about the relationship between our oral microbiome and a woman's ability
to get pregnant? So there has been some research to show that if a woman has gum disease pre-pregnancy
that her it will take her approximately two months longer to conceive a child. And that's
to do with the kind of hormonal fluctuations again and also inflammation.
Wow. There's also links between a man's ability to be fertile and their oral health, right?
Which is again, when we start to really absorb this idea that the body is interconnected,
it all starts to make sense.
I'm not sure many people would still make the link between male fertility and the health
of their mouth though.
Yeah, so the most kind of common or the biggest one is that men who have gum disease are 2.85
times more likely to have erectile dysfunction. And that's to do with certain oral bacteria, they release kind of enzymes and inflammatory markers,
and these can travel through the blood vessels
and they can impact how your blood vessels
dilate and constrict,
and therefore how much blood travels to parts of your body.
So that is the underpinning mechanism
for things like cardiovascular disease,
where blood is not traveling to the heart, and also erectile dysfunction, where where blood is not traveling to the heart
and also erectile dysfunction,
where blood is just not traveling to the penis
as well as it should.
And then in terms of fertility,
so there has been some research where they have looked
at men who are sub fertile,
and they've done a oral examination on them,
and they found that over 90% of those men
had some sort of oral disease,
be it gum disease, decay,
an infected wisdom tooth, whatever it is.
They split that group into two.
Half the group had the treatment that they needed
to resolve that infection.
And then after six months,
there was a 70% improved pregnancy outcome
with the half that
had the oral disease sorted out compared to the half that had not had the oral disease
sorted out.
Wow.
It's pretty remarkable, isn't it?
Yeah.
And they showed also an improvement in spermatic parameters.
So the quality and the motility of the sperm also improved when the periodontal disease
or any other oral disease was improved as well.
Yeah, this whole idea of this interconnection between all the different parts of the body
is just profound.
We know in medicine that if a man starts to complain of erectile dysfunction, it could
be the first sign of coronary artery disease. Okay, so
we're trained to know that if that's happening, we must also screen them for coronary heart
disease risk factors, blood pressure, do the blood tests, all that kind of stuff. Because
again, we're talking about blood vessels and the blood vessels in the hearts, blood vessels, other parts of your body, you know, the health of them
is not completely separate. And it goes back to what you said at the start, right? For
me, this idea that the mouth and the body are not separate, but it goes bigger than
that for me for all the, for all the advances in modern allopathic medicine of which there have been
many incredible ones, I think one of the weaknesses is the separation between mouth and body,
but even within the body, between heart and lungs and kidneys and guts. We have specialists for all of these different organs.
And it's just really clear when you look at the science, actually, these things are all linked.
Things don't happen just in one part in isolation. Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, massively. I think it's a really big issue with modern health care, I think,
is that we are all stuck in our own little bubbles of our specialties.
And you're totally right, if we want to really achieve full body health for a patient,
we need to be looking at every single system and organ in the body
and try and get everything to be connected.
Yeah, and you do that in your clinic, don't you?
We try. It's hard.
So yeah, we have tried to integrate a lot of medicine into the dental
practice. So we do blood tests, IV drips, we do gut and oral microbiome testing. We have a nutritionist,
we have a functional medicine doctor. We are trying to again, just put the mouth back into the body
and connect everything. I just must love that, I would imagine. They do, yeah.
I mean, I would say from our side, running the clinic,
it's logistically very difficult.
And part of that is, for example, like NHS hospital records,
the medical and the dental are not integrated.
And it's like the amount of research that you could get
to connect the dental and medical together would be phenomenal.
And it's just things like that where, so instead we have to sit there, even our dental booking systems,
we can't integrate medical into it.
So we have to have two different booking systems and two, I mean, it's just the way that our society is,
is that it's two separate things.
Yeah. The mouth is the window, isn't it, into the rest of the body?
Yeah.
So what we're trying to also do at the clinic is like kind of create a hub where we can
collect lots of data and try and strengthen that mouth-body connection.
So during checkups, we have the option to check patients' blood pressure.
We check their blood glucose levels, their vitamin D levels, and also obviously their
microbiome as well.
But that's really fun, right? blood glucose levels, their vitamin D levels, and also obviously their microbiome as well.
But that's really fun, right?
When I say fun, I mean, that's really exciting
because what it means,
if I think about it through the eyes of a patient,
you're coming in, let's say,
because there's a problem with your tooth, right?
So, okay, I've neglected my health for years,
my oral health, so I'm gonna go and see a dentist.
But just the fact that you then offer
blood testing and blood pressure and all this other stuff, it's starting to put in the mind
of the patients that my mouth health is not just about my mouth health.
Yeah, exactly.
Which I think is brand new information for a lot of people.
It is. And even when we do a checkup, a lot of the time we say,
medically, is there anything that we need to know about?
Or you want any medications?
And previously, a lot of patients would be like,
oh, it's nothing that you'd need to know about.
And I'd be like, what does that mean?
And then it turns out, I checked their medical history,
and they have diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure.
They have everything.
But it works both ways.
I would argue that the medical profession actually perhaps needs to be educated more
about just how important dental health is.
Yeah, exactly.
Because I'm pretty sure in a lot of type two diabetic consultations, I'm sure there'll
be some clinicians who are doing this, but in many consultations, they're not also being
told about their mouth health.
So this is something I'm really passionate about.
When that patient is sitting in front of you as a doctor,
you may only get them once, right?
So how you interact with them, the language you use,
whether it was empowering or disempowering,
the tools that you offer to them, you may only get one hit.
So I've always taken that really seriously.
You must be very careful what you're saying.
And even if you just, you tell them
about their blood sugar results, but say, hey, listen,
there's a strong association with your oral health.
When did you last go and see the dentist?
You may not be able to do anything about that as a doctor,
but just dropping it into their heads
means that they walk out,
they get their car, they drive into work and thinking,
hmm, blood sugar, but yeah, actually, you know what?
I haven't checked.
I haven't gone to the dentist for two years.
Maybe I should, which is why I think it's so, so important.
And on the flip side from our side, as a dentist,
we often will see patients much more regularly
than they will see their doctor.
Because unfortunately, most people go to the doctor when they're sick, but they should
be going to the dentist for a six monthly checkup or for their hygiene.
So if we can pick up things in the dental setting, such as high blood pressure or elevated
blood glucose levels and refer that patient effectively to their doctor, then we can actually
flag those issues before they become real
problems and treat it.
And this oral microbiome testing that you offer, I know you're involved with creating
an oral microbiome test. You're very motivated. You really want to make a difference and actually
get this out there to people, which is really exciting. I've got mine sitting at home. I
haven't actually done it yet, but I'm going to do it
because I can't wait to see what comes out of it.
For people who've heard this conversation
and are thinking, actually, I wouldn't mind doing it.
Do they have to book in to see you
or can they just go online and get it done themselves?
So actually you can go online and get it done yourself.
And it will give you a beautiful snapshot
of what's going on inside your mouth at that moment.
We do always recommend that you do go
and visit your dentist or hygienist
after getting these results.
And often, so I check every single patient's results
and I write my own clinical comments at the top of it.
So it does not replace the need to go to your dentist,
but it might urge you or push you to go to your
dentist and it can kind of empower you to have more understanding of what's going on
inside your mouth.
And for people who do want to, you know, take advantage of that, which, you know, I'm sure
a lot of people probably haven't heard of oral microbiome testing, right? So where do
they go? What's the website?
So the test is called Oralis1.
So that's O-R-A-L-I-S. Oralis1, okay.
And the website is thslabs.co.uk.
Okay, so people can go there. So that's a UK address. People listen to this show all over the world. Can people
get it in different countries or is it just UK at the moment?
At the moment just UK, but actually we're hoping by beginning of January we'll be expanding.
So we've got a waiting list. So even if you can't buy it right now, send us an email or
inquire and we can put you on the waiting list and let you know when we're open.
And from what you've seen so far, I mean, first of all, how long has this specific test
been around for?
So we launched it mid October. So we've been working on it for two years or so, but launched
mid October.
Okay. And just so I'm being fully thorough in this conversation, what would critics of
the test or oral microbiome testing say?
What do you know?
Yeah, you know I do.
Oh, they're shouting it hard, hard and loud.
Because I think it's always nice to talk about this because then you can address it basically.
I really appreciate that.
So I would say some critics have an issue with it.
They say that, OK, fine, you can test your oral microbiome.
What are you going to do about it?
How is that going to change the treatment that your dentist
might provide to you?
And my argument for that is that we give you recommendations
in terms of maybe supplements, or we've
worked with nutritionists and functional medicine practitioners
on lifestyle improvements as well for your gum health.
But we are not saying that we are going to cure
your gum disease through using a mouthwash.
So you still do need to see your dentist
and you still need to have maybe the traditional treatment
that you normally would, but we would supplement that
with potentially lifestyle food, nutrition choices, or even just fine tuning your oral products. So telling
you what toothpaste would work best for you. The sole kind of aim of this test is really
a communication tool and to empower patients to understand more about their oral health.
And this goes back to what we were saying at the beginning, that patients are scared of going to the dentist,
they don't trust us, they don't understand
what is going on in their mouth and how important it is
for the rest of their body.
And in my opinion,
Oralice One answers all of those questions for a patient.
There's a range of people who listen
to a podcast like mine.
There is a subset of listeners who are really, really motivated about their health.
So they want to know everything.
They really want to look after themselves and make those 1% gains or whatever it might
be to keep themselves well for as long as they can.
I'd probably put myself into that category.
So I hear a test like that and I'm like, first of all, I'm doing it.
So thank you for bringing up that kit.
I'm definitely going to do it. And I doing it, right? So thank you for bringing up that kids, right? I'm definitely gonna do it.
So now encourage my wife to do it as well.
Okay, so, and then let's say I get the test done, right?
And let's say some imbalances are identified.
Is it the sort of thing or is it too early to know
where I can then make some changes, you know, apply
some of the recommendations and then in six months time recheck to see if there has been
a change in my oral microbiome.
Yes. And that's why for anyone who's thinking why she named the test Oralis I, it's because
Oralis II is going to be coming out soon. And that's a retest tool.
So the Oralis I, it looks at over 500 different bacteria.
It zooms into the top 20 bacteria that we know are associated with gum disease, decay, bad breath.
And then we also zoom in even more into the strain levels of the certain bacteria that we know are really, really bad. So going back to the Alzheimer's, we were talking about P. gingivalis, and it releases
these gingipanes.
We look for those gingipanes.
We also look at genetic mutations.
So we look at 10 genetic mutations that we know will make a patient more inflammatory,
increase their risk of gum disease, make their saliva more acidic, which means they have
a higher chance of decay.
And that's Oralis I.
Oralis II, we cut out all the mutations.
We don't need to retest those. Nothing's going to change.
But we look at the strain levels, the bacteria,
and the ratio of all of your bacteria
to see whether or not the recommendations we've given you
have indeed improved your oral health.
And I guess also for early adopters
who want to get involved with this,
can I say new technology? Because it feels new to me.
You know, I spent my life thinking about health and talking about health and
this feels like a new, um, something I haven't really heard that much about yet. I guess
you guys are always going to be doing research, right? So as people retest and as it's developed,
you know, in five years time, if you're sitting here having this conversation
with me, I suspect if we mirror what's happening in gut health, not only would the amount of
research explode like it did with gut health, but you'll probably have a much more nuanced
understanding, I guess, of how often should we test?
You know, what's the optimum for a certain patient?
What recommendations are consistently working for everyone, which might mean some people
don't even need a test.
Do you know what I mean?
I think it's still early days, right?
It is early days, yeah.
And we're working with dental professionals at the same time.
So they're actually providing the testing to their patients and they're funneling back
information on what their findings are.
We have a team of biostatisticians who are looking at all of the data and trying
to actually find correlations and connections. And then that will give us new areas that
we can research. And we are also connected to a couple of universities where we're going
to be starting to do some research trials with those places because the issue with the
oral microbiome is just there's not as much research about it
than there is the gut microbiome.
And I think that we have a beautiful hub
of information and data.
And we're already seeing some crazy things
like musculoskeletal disorders.
So we have a lot of patients who have
certain musculoskeletal disorders
and they weirdly keep on having the same oral biomarkers, all of them have the same biomarkers
in their saliva.
So it's things like that where it's like we're super early days, but there's some really
exciting and promising things coming up.
Before we finish, can you just mention a case that I've heard you talk about before?
And this really speaks to this link again, I know we keep hammering home this point, but it's important, right? The mouth is the gateway to the rest of the body.
You're talking about this bi-directional link between the mouth and many areas of the body.
We haven't really gone into auto-immunity. We touched on it a little bit, but I believe
there was a case where you saw someone with rheumatoid arthritis
and you managed to help them in perhaps quite an unexpected way. Is that fair to say?
Yeah, definitely. Even myself, I was not fully convinced of every single mouth body connection
and is there really going to be such a huge improvement in their general health if I improve
their oral health? And so I do treat a lot of patients
who have rheumatoid arthritis.
And I have a lot of rheumatologists
who refer their patients to me.
And so there was one patient in particular
was my first patient who I'd done any work with.
And she was under the care of a rheumatologist
and a functional medicine practitioner.
And she had been seeing multiple functional medicine practitioners
and she was on a ton of steroids
and she was really not happy.
And so she finally went to this guy
and this guy was the first one to say,
when was the last time you went to the dentist?
How's your oral health?
She was like, oh, I've had like six teeth taken out
in the last year.
And he was like, that's not normal.
Like you shouldn't be having six teeth pulled out.
So he was like, look, I have a friend called Victoria.
Will you go and see her?
She likes testing people's saliva and doing weird things.
So like, maybe you could just meet her.
So obviously I tested every, all her saliva,
I did everything.
And she had a really bad gum disease.
And we did a lot of treatment on her.
We helped improve her gum disease. And we did a lot of treatment on her. We helped improve her gum disease.
We stabilized it completely.
And actually after that, about six months later,
she was able to get off her steroid medication
and be medication-free,
and her rheumatoid arthritis improved significantly.
So it's not to say that I cured her and it was amazing,
but I think that with most diseases, they're so multifactorial.
And this was a really big piece of the puzzle for her.
For her.
Yeah, exactly, for her.
And no one had addressed that.
And just by addressing it, her general systemic inflammation reduced to a point where she was able to get off medications.
Yeah, I love that. Thank you for sharing that. It's so, such a powerful case study that gives
hope to people. But beyond that, there is that wider point, which again, I think, I
just think we miss so much. Like we look at all of these separate diseases as separate
entities without realizing that
a lot of the time it's the same risk factors that in different people manifests in different
symptoms and different diseases.
We've all got a genetic predisposition to certain things.
And if let's say through the lens of the four pillars, if your food is off, your movements
off, your sleep's off and your stress is off, over time that is going to create in some people symptoms and then disease. And what disease
you end up getting from those imbalances will hugely be influenced by your genetic predispositions.
And therefore, although we study these diseases as separate, the way I practiced for many
years was to go, well, what are the root causes?
Let's look at all of these root causes and see which ones we can address in an individual
patient.
And for that person, gum health, oral health was a big driver of inflammation.
Yeah.
Right.
It might not be for someone else.
Yeah. So someone else with
rheumatoid arthritis who's got really good gums, for example, they may not see an improvement.
But for that person, it did.
Definitely. 100%.
I kind of think we miss this so much in medicine. Victoria, it's been so wonderful speaking
to you. I think you're doing something phenomenal and even creating
this oral microbiome test. I know it's early days yet, but it's really exciting. If we
see where gut health has gone over the last 10 years, it's exciting for me to think, well,
where might, you know, oral health and oral microbiome testing be in 10 years? If people
want to follow you online, where's the best place to go?
Probably Instagram. So that's just Dr. Victoria Sampson or our clinic, which is the health
society may fair.
Okay. Fantastic. And then lastly, if someone's stumbled across this conversation and it's
dawned on them that they simply have not taken their oral health seriously.
And the penny has dropped today and they thought,
actually, you know what?
I need to sort this out.
Yeah. Okay.
What would you advise them to do?
Book an appointment with their dentist and their hygienist.
Or might be a bit biased, come over to our clinic.
We'll also check your blood pressure.
We'll check a few other things for you.
But if you're not ready to come to your dentist yet,
even just some of those really simple things that we've talked about,
brushing twice a day, two minutes, spit don't rinse,
rinse water out after you've eaten a day, two minutes, bit don't rinse, rinse water out after you've eaten a meal.
Those are all small steps into a better direction.
And once you're ready, then you can come and visit your dentist or your hygienist,
or you can do an oral microbiome test and start your journey.
Dr. Victoria Sampson, thanks for coming on the show.
Thank you so much for having me.
Tori Sampson, thanks for coming on the show. Thank you so much for having me.
I really hope you enjoyed that conversation.
Do think about one thing that you can take away and apply into your own life.
And also have a think about one thing from this conversation that you can teach to somebody
else.
Remember, when you teach someone, it not only helps them, it also helps you
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