Your Dentist Could Help Lower Your Heart Disease and Diabetes Risk
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Root Canals May Lower Risk of Heart Disease, Diabetes

Poor oral health can cause low-grade inflammation linked to some chronic illnesses. A root canal (when it’s needed) could lower those risks, a new study found.
Root Canals May Lower Risk of Heart Disease, Diabetes
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If you’ve been putting off a root canal, you may want to schedule that appointment. That’s because new evidence suggests it could have protective health effects that go way beyond your mouth.

A study found that successful root canal treatment was linked to improvements in blood sugar, cholesterol, and inflammation — all key factors in heart disease and diabetes risk.

“Our research shows that treating an infected tooth does far more than relieve pain. It can improve your overall health,” says lead author Sadia Niazi, PhD, a senior clinical lecturer in endodontology (the study of what’s inside of teeth) at King’s College London.

Why Oral Health Matters for Heart and Metabolic Health

The mouth is home to a rich community of bacteria. While some are helpful in keeping you healthy, others can cause tooth decay, gum disease, and infection. When an infection develops inside a tooth, the bacteria responsible can sometimes enter the bloodstream.

Apical periodontitis, the condition treated in this study, is local inflammation around the root of the tooth that can be caused by a deep cavity or tooth infection. It’s known to trigger ongoing low-grade inflammation — the type of immune activity that may negatively impact how the body processes sugar, and even raise heart disease risk.

While previous studies have linked dental inflammation with higher risk of metabolic and heart issues, investigators decided to find out more about whether fixing the infection with a root canal could reverse these effects.

Study Looked at Blood Samples Drawn Before and After Root Canals

The study included 65 adults treated at a dental hospital in England. At the start of the trial, no one had diabetes, heart disease, or metabolic syndrome (a group of risk factors like obesity and high blood pressure that raise the risk of heart attack and stroke).

Participants had blood drawn before the root canal and again at three months, six months, one year, and two years afterward. Researchers analyzed these blood samples using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, a highly precise method for studying blood metabolites — molecules that reflect how the body processes sugar, fat, and other nutrients.

Researchers focused on more than 40 biomarkers tied to cardiometabolic risk, including:

  • Blood sugar levels and blood sugar control
  • Cholesterol and fatty acids
  • Inflammatory markers linked to heart disease and chronic illness

The study compared each person to themselves over a two year period using what’s called a “self-controlled” study design. This allows each participant to serve as their own comparison over time, rather than comparing one group of people with another. This helps reduce the impact of differences between individuals, like age, health status, or lifestyle.

Root Canals Led to Improvements in Blood Sugar, Cholesterol, and Inflammation

Blood samples revealed significant metabolic improvements following successful root canal treatment during the follow-up period, including:

  • Better Blood Sugar Control Participants had significantly lower glucose levels two years after treatment, which translates to a lower diabetes risk.
  • Healthier Cholesterol Short-term improvements were reported in cholesterol and fatty acids, which impact heart health.
  • Lower Inflammation Markers associated with heart disease and other chronic conditions dropped over time.

Combined, this is proof of a body-wide effect, says Dr. Niazi.

Oral bacteria from infected teeth can disrupt metabolism, showing how oral health impacts the whole body. This is a major shift in thinking. Root canal treatment isn’t just about saving teeth; it’s about protecting long-term health,” she says.

These findings are consistent with the existing evidence that poor oral health is tied to a higher risk of metabolic syndrome, says Eleanor Levin, MD, a clinical professor of cardiovascular medicine at Stanford Medicine in California.

“The common link is inflammation and this adds evidence that reducing inflammation improves metabolic disease," says Dr. Levin, who wasn’t involved in the study.

“The root canal reduces the inflammation by removing the site of the dental infection,” she says.

Dental Care Is So Much More Than a Cosmetic Concern

“Timely diagnosis and treatment of root canal infections — symptomatic or not — are essential for reducing [chronic] disease risks,” Niazi says.

It’s a two way street, says Levin. Chronic gum disease can increase metabolic syndrome risk. At the same time, an impaired immune response due to metabolic syndrome can reduce oral health, she says.

“Both problems share risk factors such as a high sugar diet, [being] overweight, smoking, and sedentary lifestyle,” says Levin.

Levin’s advice for reducing your risk of dental inflammation and chronic disease:

EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.
Resources
  1. Zhang Y et al. Successful Endodontic Treatment Improves Glucose and Lipid Metabolism: A Longitudinal Metabolomic Study. Journal of Translational Medicine. November 18, 2025.
  2. Pirih FQ et al. Association Between Metabolic Syndrome and Periodontitis: The Role of Lipids, Inflammatory Cytokines, Altered Host Response, and the Microbiome. Periodontology 2000. August 31, 2021.
  3. Talekar AW et al. Association Between Cardiovascular Diseases and Apical Periodontitis: An Umbrella Review with Stratification of Evidence and Sensitivity Analysis. Journal of Dentistry. October 2025.

Tom Gavin

Fact-Checker

Tom Gavin joined Everyday Health as copy chief in 2022 after a lengthy stint as a freelance copy editor. He has a bachelor's degree in psychology from College of the Holy Cross.

Prior to working for Everyday Health, he wrote, edited, copy edited, and fact-checked for books, magazines, and digital content covering a range of topics, including women's health, lifestyle, recipes, restaurant reviews, travel, and more. His clients have included Frommer's, Time-Life, and Google, among others.

He lives in Brooklyn, New York, where he likes to spend his time making music, fixing too-old electronics, and having fun with his family and the dog who has taken up residence in their home.

Becky Upham, MA

Becky Upham

Author

Becky Upham has worked throughout the health and wellness world for over 25 years. She's been a race director, a team recruiter for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, a salesperson for a major pharmaceutical company, a blogger for Moogfest, a communications manager for Mission Health, a fitness instructor, and a health coach.

Upham majored in English at the University of North Carolina and has a master's in English writing from Hollins University.

Upham enjoys teaching cycling classes, running, reading fiction, and making playlists.