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gum disease prevention

Periodontal maintenance visit showing professional cleaning around teeth and gums to prevent gum disease and maintain long-term oral health, featuring the Britten Periodontics and Implant Dentistry logo.

Gum treatment is a big step, but it’s not the finish line. Periodontal maintenance visits help keep infection from creeping back in. Gum disease behaves like a chronic condition, so ongoing care protects the work you already invested in.

Why Maintenance Is Different From a Regular Cleaning

After periodontal therapy, you may have deeper areas that need extra attention. Therefore, maintenance appointments focus on disrupting bacteria in places a standard cleaning may not fully address. In addition, your hygienist tracks pocket depths and bleeding to spot changes early.

What Happens at These Appointments

You’ll get a thorough cleaning above and below the gums, plus a review of home-care technique. Meanwhile, your team may recommend specific tools like interdental brushes or water flossers for tricky areas. Also, if pockets increase, your provider can adjust the plan quickly instead of letting problems build for months.

How Often Should You Go

Many patients do best every 3 to 4 months, especially right after treatment. However, frequency depends on risk factors like smoking, diabetes, genetics, and past bone loss. So your schedule should fit your mouth, not your neighbor’s.

Consistency matters because bacteria repopulate fast. As a result, skipping visits can undo progress quietly. At Britten Perio, we treat maintenance as prevention with a purpose: protect bone, stabilize gums, and keep teeth longer. If you’ve completed therapy, keep your periodontal maintenance visits on the calendar and your future self will thank you.

Early signs of gum disease shown with healthy-looking gums and toothbrush, featuring the Britten Perio logo and educational text about bleeding, tender gums, and bad breath.

If you’ve noticed bleeding when you brush, you might be seeing the early signs of gum disease. Many people shrug it off as “brushing too hard,” but your gums rarely bleed for fun. The good news is that you can catch gum issues early and turn things around with the right care.

Bleeding, Puffiness, and Bad Breath

Healthy gums usually look pink and feel firm. However, inflammation can creep in quietly. For example, you may see redness along the gumline, swelling, or tenderness when you floss. Meanwhile, chronic bad breath can show up when bacteria collect under the gums. Also, if your gums pull away from your teeth, teeth can look “longer” even though they did not grow.

Changes You Can Feel

Sometimes the first clue is a feeling, not a look. Your bite may feel “off,” or you may notice sensitivity near the gumline. In addition, food trapping between teeth can increase if the gums lose their snug seal. Therefore, if something feels different for more than a week or two, it’s worth taking seriously.

What to Do Next

Start with the basics: brush gently twice a day, floss daily, and use an antibacterial rinse if your dentist recommends it. Still, home care cannot remove hardened tartar below the gums. So schedule an evaluation, especially if bleeding persists. At Britten Perio, we focus on diagnosing the cause and building a plan that fits your needs, whether that means a deep cleaning, targeted therapy, or a maintenance schedule.

Catching the problem early protects bone, saves teeth, and lowers the odds of bigger procedures later. As a result, acting on the early signs of gum disease can be one of the smartest moves you make for your mouth.

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