When we think about living longer and aging well, we picture the gym, the kitchen, maybe the cardiologist’s office. The dentist’s chair rarely makes the list. Yet a growing body of research suggests the mouth is more tightly connected to whole-body health than most people — and many doctors — appreciate.
I want to be careful here, because this is an area where marketing often runs ahead of the evidence. A dental check-up does not replace looking after your heart, your gut, or your skin.
And anyone who promises that fixing your teeth will add years to your life is overselling. But your oral health does belong in the same conversation. Here are three connections worth understanding — each with an honest look at what the science does, and doesn’t yet, show.
3 Connections Between Dental Health and Longevity
1. Inflamed gums and the cardiovascular system
Periodontal disease — gum disease — is a chronic, low-grade bacterial infection that quietly inflames the tissues holding your teeth. It’s also one of the more striking examples of the mouth affecting the rest of the body.
Large population studies, summarized in the American Heart Association’s scientific statement on periodontal disease and cardiovascular disease, show that people with moderate-to-severe gum disease have a higher risk of heart attack, stroke, and other cardiovascular events. Importantly, this association holds up even after accounting for shared risk factors like smoking and diabetes. Periodontal bacteria such as Porphyromonas gingivalis have even been found inside arterial plaques.
Here’s the honest part. Association is not the same as proof
The AHA is explicit that a cause-and-effect relationship has not been confirmed, and that there is, as yet, no direct evidence that treating gum disease prevents heart attacks or strokes — a conclusion echoed by Cochrane reviews, which find too few large trials to be sure.
What the treatment reliably does is lower markers of inflammation in the blood, such as C-reactive protein, and improve the function of the blood-vessel lining — meaningful biological changes, even if the effect on hard outcomes is still being studied.
So the sensible reading is this: healthy gums are one modifiable, measurable part of your cardiovascular risk picture — not a substitute for managing blood pressure, cholesterol, and smoking, but a genuine piece of the puzzle that a routine dental exam can catch early.
2. The oral–gut connection
Your mouth hosts the second-largest microbial community in your body, after the gut. You swallow these microbes all day in your saliva. Some of them can reach the intestine, particularly when the gut is already inflamed. Researchers call this two-way relationship the oral–gut axis.
The evidence linking the two is genuinely interesting. Oral bacteria turn up in the gut tissue of people with inflammatory bowel disease; Fusobacterium nucleatum, a common mouth bacterium, is consistently enriched in colorectal tumors; and the periodontal bug P. gingivalis has been linked to rheumatoid arthritis through its effect on the immune system.
In animal studies, introducing these oral bacteria can worsen gut inflammation.
But this is exactly where popular health writing tends to overreach
In humans, most of this evidence is associative, not proof of cause.
There’s no good evidence that “fixing your oral microbiome” cures inflammatory bowel disease or irritable bowel syndrome, or that an oral probiotic or special mouthwash can “reset” your gut.
What the science does support is more modest but still worthwhile. Looking after your gums plausibly lowers your overall inflammatory load, and that matters most as part of a broader package — diet, not smoking, staying active — rather than as a standalone cure.
3. Your bite and the way your lower face ages
The lower third of your face — from the base of the nose to the chin — is scaffolded by your teeth and jawbone. When that support is lost, the face changes. With severe tooth wear or the loss of back teeth that aren’t replaced, the height of the bite can genuinely collapse: the lower face shortens, lips lose support, the folds around the mouth deepen, and the corners of the mouth can turn down.
Again, the caveat matters. Mild-to-moderate wear — which almost everyone develops with age — is usually compensated for by the body, and does not measurably shorten the face.
The claim that most middle-aged people have a “collapsed bite” needing full-mouth reconstruction, or that opening the bite a few millimetres is a reliable “non-surgical facelift”, is marketing, not evidence.
There are no good controlled trials behind it. Restoring lost support in people who genuinely need it — through well-planned restorations, implants or dentures — restores lower-face height, lip support, and, importantly, the ability to chew and speak. What it cannot do is reverse skin aging or the loss of facial volume that comes from elsewhere. This remains the territory of dermatology and facial surgery.
The useful message is the unglamorous one. Protect your natural teeth and bite, treat real problems early, and be cautious of anyone selling your bite as the secret to a younger face.
Where this leaves you
Across all three connections, the pattern is the same. The mouth is not a magic lever, and the boldest claims tend to be the least supported.
But oral health is a quiet, modifiable contributor to aging well — and the things that help are reassuringly ordinary.
So clean between your teeth daily, see a dentist regularly so gum disease and wear are caught before they cause damage, and don’t smoke. If you live with diabetes or cardiovascular risk, it’s worth letting your dentist and doctor compare notes.
Leaving the mouth off your longevity checklist means overlooking something measurable, treatable, and genuinely connected to the rest of you. That’s reason enough to give it a seat at the table.
About the author
Dr. Chalita le Roux is a general and cosmetic dentist in private practice in Roodepoort, Johannesburg. She qualified BChD cum laude from the University of Pretoria (2020) and is a member of the South African Academy of Aesthetic Dentistry (SAAAD). HPCSA registration number: DP 0118702.

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