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Dental Implants and Gum Disease

Dental Implants and Gum Disease

By: | Tags: , , | Comments: 0 | December 27th, 2025

Dental Implants and Gum Disease: Is It Possible to Get Implants with Periodontitis?

Gum disease (periodontitis) is a silent epidemic affecting a significant portion of the adult population in the UK. This chronic inflammation is the leading cause of tooth loss among adults. When patients are diagnosed with advanced gum disease and face the reality of losing their teeth, their first question is often: “Can I get dental implants, or am I doomed to wear removable dentures forever?”

The answer is a definitive yes, but with strict conditions. Getting dental implants with gum disease is possible, but periodontitis is a major risk factor that must be managed, not ignored. At our clinic in Budapest, we successfully treat patients with a history of gum disease, but only by adhering to a rigorous three-step protocol. Simply “screwing in” an implant is not enough; we must create a stable, disease-free foundation first.

In this guide, we will explore how to bridge the gap between active infection and a lasting smile, when it is better to say goodbye to remaining teeth, and why our specialized protocol in Budapest offers a safe solution.

 

Why is Gum Disease Dangerous for Implants?

Many people assume that once the bad teeth are extracted, the disease disappears. Unfortunately, this is not entirely true. The susceptibility to periodontitis (due to genetics, immune response, or smoking) and the bacterial composition of your mouth remain.

Unlike natural teeth, implants do not have a biological seal of fibers to protect them. If the bacteria responsible for gum disease are allowed to thrive around an implant, they can cause peri-implantitis. This is a destructive inflammatory process affecting the soft and hard tissues surrounding dental implants, which can progress faster than natural gum disease and lead to the loss of your new teeth. Therefore, the golden rule at Smile Designers is: we never place dental implants with gum disease present in an active, untreated state.

 

The Smile Designers Protocol: 3 Steps to Safety

To ensure the long-term success of dental implants with gum disease, we strictly follow this strategy for our international patients:

1. Strategic Decisions: Removing Hopeless Teeth

This is often the hardest but most crucial step. Emotionally, it is difficult to part with natural teeth, but professionally, we must distinguish between teeth that are “barely hanging on” and those that offer long-term stability.

If periodontitis is advanced and only a few teeth (e.g., 4-6) remain with compromised bone support, strategic extraction is often the wiser choice. Why?

  • Eliminating Infection Sources: Diseased teeth act as reservoirs for bacteria, constantly releasing pathogens into the mouth that endanger fresh implants.
  • Structural Risks: Placing implants alongside unstable, moving teeth leads to aesthetic and functional compromises.
  • The All-on-4 Advantage: In such cases, it is often safer and more cost-effective to remove the remaining uncertain teeth and start with a clean slate (e.g., the All-on-4 concept). This provides a stable, easy-to-clean, and uniform result, which is a specialty of our Budapest clinic.

2. Active Periodontal Therapy (For Saveable Teeth)

If you have stable teeth that we plan to keep, eliminating gingival inflammation before implantation is non-negotiable. Regular brushing is not enough; professional intervention is required.

  • Deep Cleaning (Curettage): Removal of tartar and inflamed tissue from below the gum line and root surfaces.
  • EMS Perioflow Therapy: This modern Swiss technology is key to our success. Using a special mixture of powder and water, we gently but effectively remove the biofilm (bacterial layer) from even the deepest pockets without scratching the tooth surface or the implant.

We only proceed with surgery once the gums are pink, healthy, and pocket depths have normalized.

3. Life-Long Maintenance

The work doesn’t end when you fly back home from Budapest. For patients getting dental implants with gum disease history, maintenance is vital.

The disease can recur, this time attacking the implants. Regular check-ups (usually every 3-6 months) and professional cleaning are mandatory to catch the slightest sign of peri-implantitis. We are honest with our patients: if you cannot commit to strict oral hygiene and regular visits, implants may not be the right choice for you.

 

Bone Loss: When the Disease “Eats” the Bone

One of the most challenging consequences of periodontitis is bone resorption. As the inflammation destroys the jawbone, there is often insufficient bone volume to hold an implant.

Fortunately, traveling to Budapest allows you to access advanced solutions for this problem at a fraction of UK prices:

  • Bone Grafting: We can rebuild lost bone using your own bone or biocompatible materials to create a solid foundation.
  • All-on-4 Technique: This method often eliminates the need for extensive grafting. By tilting the posterior implants, we can utilize the available native bone. This is particularly beneficial for periodontal patients who have suffered significant bone loss in the back of the jaw.

 

Risk Factors You Must Know

While receiving dental implants with gum disease history is feasible, certain factors can drastically lower success rates:

  • Smoking: Smoking is the number one risk factor for both periodontitis and implant failure. It constricts blood vessels, slows down healing, and increases infection risk. If you are a periodontal patient wanting implants, quitting (or drastically reducing) smoking is highly recommended.
  • Uncontrolled Diabetes: High blood sugar levels impair the body’s ability to fight infection and heal bone.

 

Summary: Hope is Not Lost

A diagnosis of periodontitis does not mean you have to give up on the comfort and aesthetics of fixed teeth. In fact, in many cases, removing the diseased teeth and performing a full mouth reconstruction (e.g., All-on-4) is the cleanest, healthiest path forward, freeing you from chronic infection and loose teeth.

The key is expertise and cooperation: at Smile Designers, we provide the professional preparation (Perioflow, surgery) and high-quality care in Budapest, while you provide the commitment to oral hygiene.

 

FAQs About Implants and Gum Disease

Can I get dental implants if I currently have gum disease?

No, not immediately. Placing dental implants with gum disease in an active state is dangerous because bacteria will infect the new implant. We always start with periodontal treatment (deep cleaning) to stabilize your condition before any surgery.

 

Why is it sometimes better to extract teeth before implants?

If only a few diseased teeth remain, they can act as a reservoir for infection, endangering your new implants. Strategically removing them allows for a full arch restoration (like All-on-4), which is more stable, hygienic, and often more cost-effective for patients traveling to Budapest.

 

How long do implants last in patients with a history of periodontitis?

With proper preparation and maintenance, success rates are very high (over 90%), similar to healthy patients. However, the key is strictly following a maintenance schedule with professional cleaning every 3-6 months to prevent recurrence.

 

Do I need bone grafting after gum disease?

Often yes, as periodontitis destroys jawbone. However, modern techniques like All-on-4 allow us to place implants in available bone, often avoiding the need for expensive and time-consuming bone grafting procedures.

 

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