Part 2C: Bleeding gums and vitamin K2 deficiency
When patients are diagnosed with gum disease, with loss of gums and bone, they often ask me:
Do your gums grow back?
This question always makes my heart drop, because the simple answer, is no: your gums do not grow back.
Gum disease (periodontal disease) is a long-term chronic disease. It’s an inflammatory condition that often progresses without response to treatment. While small amounts of gum regeneration may be possible and surgical options are there, the broad answer is that its irreversible.
I often wondered why this was the case. Patients would clean their teeth well, yet gum disease would often worsen. It made me think that the cause of gum disease had to go beyond just plaque build-up on teeth.
As it turns out, it’s all related to Vitamin K2.
In this series, we explored the role of Vitamin K2 inside the teeth. Now we’ll look outside the teeth to see how it can help you prevent gum disease or stop it in its tracks at an early stage.
What is periodontal or gum disease?
The periodontium refers to the structures that make up your gums.
It consists of the:
- Cementum
- Alveolar bone
Periodontal ligament
Gum disease or periodontitis occurs when these structures are broken down. It progresses through the following stages over time:
Mild Periodontitis: Gingivitis or bleeding gums
Moderate periodontitis: Loss of ligament attachment, pocketing or receding gums
Severe periodontitis: Alveolar bone loss and deep gum pocketing
Advanced periodontitis: Loose, mobile teeth and tooth loss
For the most part, once gum disease reaches a certain stage, you cannot regrow your gums or dental bone (withstanding some surgical procedures).
That’s why it’s so important to cure the cause of gum disease – not just address the symptoms.
Over time, gum disease advances from bleeding gums to loose, infected teeth. The good news is that there may be a way to cure periodontal disease and prevent it progressing to the advanced stages – and that’s all thanks to Vitamin K2.
Vitamin K2 and gingivitis
In essence, bleeding gums is a sign of a loss of tolerance between your oral microbiome and immune system. It’s closely connected to your gut health and Vitamin D status, which I’ve outlined in other articles.
Vitamin K2 doesn’t work independently to Vitamin D. But in this article, we’ll focus on Vitamin K2.
Remember, bleeding gums is the earliest sign of gum disease. As an inflammation-based disease, gum disease signals an imbalanced immune system.
Vitamin K2 has an anti-inflammatory effect on the immune system. It has been shown to decrease inflammation in the body by:
- Decreasing the production of inflammatory markers
- Regulating immune cells that cause inflammation
- Decreasing fibroblast cells
Each of these factors are involved in the progression of gum disease. In order to cure gum disease, we should aim to calm the immune system.
As the first signs of bleeding gums appear, we need to monitor the intake of Vitamin K2.
Vitamin K2, gum pockets and receding gums
The periodontal ligament (PDL) is what holds your tooth in place. As bleeding gums progress to moderate gum disease, there is damage to the PDL. When the PDL starts to slough away from the tooth, your gums begin to recede.
Vitamin K2 mediates the gum inflammation process in two ways:
- It decreases fibroblasts known to fuel the gum disease process. In the healing process, fibroblasts act to form scar tissue. But in gum disease, their action is harmful and could advance the calcification of periodontal ligament – an early sign of gum disease.
- It activates Matrix GLA protein: This Vitamin K2 dependent protein has been shown to prevent the calcification of the periodontal ligament. Many studies have shown that Vitamin K2 has the same anti-calcification effects around the body, including in the heart, kidneys and prostate.
More research is required to find the direct relationship between Vitamin K2 and periodontal disease. But another class of quinones (COQ10) has demonstrated an anti-inflammatory effect on the gums. COQ10 is a similar fat-soluble nutrient. Both Vitamin K2 and COQ10 have applications to cure and heal gum disease.
Vitamin K2 and advanced gum disease
Your ability to cure gum disease is thanks to the release of Vitamin K2-activated proteins to repair the damage.
Gum tissue will release osteocalcin in the presence of inflammation and gum disease and it’s been found in increased levels in the gum fluids present in periodontal disease.
There are two issues here:
- Vitamin D is required to synthesize osteocalcin.
- Vitamin K2 is required to activate it.
Osteocalcin is crucial if the body is to heal gum disease. The problem is that if you have Vitamin K2 deficiency, your osteocalcin may be released, but not active.
Additionally, osteocalcin also increases insulin sensitivity. Type II diabetes and advanced gum disease share common disease processes that have a common relationship with osteocalcin.
Vitamin K2, dental bone loss, and osteoporosis.
Vitamin K2 has a critical role in bone loss in both gum disease and osteoporosis. Vitamin K2 inhibits bone loss through resorption by inducing osteoclast apoptosis. The severity of bone loss in gum disease is worse in the presence of osteoporosis.
In post-menopausal women, low serum and saliva osteocalcin is related to lower gum disease and bone loss markers.
Gingival osteocalcin has been linked to periodontal status, i.e. the body releases osteocalcin in presence of disease.
However, in Vitamin K2 deficient patients, these proteins would not be activated, and the disease process progresses, explaining Vitamin K2’s positive role in bone density.
Vitamin K2 as a natural remedy for gum disease
Further studies are required to find out the mechanism and direct therapeutic impact of Vitamin K2 in gum disease.
However, we can link gum disease and Vitamin K2 via
- Inflammation and immune regulation
- Matrix-GLA protein
- Osteocalcin
Vitamin K2 is a central mediator of all these factors.
If you suffer from bleeding gums or are being treated for gum disease, you should eat a diet rich in Vitamin K2 and consider Vitamin K2 supplementation.
Now I want to hear from you.
Have you had gum pocketing or bleeding gums? Did Vitamin K2 help you?
Want to know more? Dr Steven Lin’s book, The Dental Diet, is available to order today. An exploration of ancestral medicine, the human microbiome and epigenetics it’s a complete guide to the mouth-body connection. Take the journey and the 40-day delicious food program for life-changing oral and whole health.
Click below to order your copy now:
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For more information on Dr. Lin’s clinical protocol that highlights the steps parents can take to prevent dental problems in their children: Click here.
References:
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3151653/
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19515019
- http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003996912002476
- http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0022034513490959
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8034777
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2549810
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8607797?ordinalpos=2&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_DefaultReportPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3536461/
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17468712
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1585709