02/17/2026
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1241804961427244&set=a.362250726049343&type=3
Flossing may lower your risk of more than 50 systemic diseases.
Most people see flossing as a small hygiene step — something that just prevents cavities or stops gums from bleeding.
But gum inflammation is not just local irritation. It is biologically active. Inflamed gums release inflammatory mediators, and harmful oral bacteria can enter the bloodstream during everyday activities like chewing. This phenomenon, called transient bacteremia, is well documented in medical literature.
Over time, untreated periodontal disease has been associated with serious systemic conditions, including:
• Cardiovascular disease and stroke
• Poorly controlled type 2 diabetes
• Pregnancy complications
• Respiratory infections
• Rheumatoid arthritis
• Cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease
• Chronic kidney disease
The connection is inflammatory and microbial.
When plaque builds up between teeth, it creates an oxygen-poor environment where pathogenic bacteria thrive. The immune system responds continuously. That chronic inflammatory burden can influence blood vessels, insulin regulation, endothelial health, and even brain tissue.
Flossing physically disrupts that bacterial biofilm in areas a toothbrush cannot reach.
It reduces the bacterial load.
It lowers gum inflammation.
It decreases repeated episodes of bacteria entering the bloodstream.
This is not cosmetic dentistry. It is preventive health care that starts in the mouth.
Oral health and systemic health are biologically connected. A simple daily habit — interdental cleaning — is one of the most practical, evidence-based steps you can take to protect both.
Small habit. Whole-body impact.