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Gum Disease Directly Linked to Accelerated Dementia Risk Through Brain Inflammation

ZOE Science & Nutrition · What inflammation is really doing to your mind, body and 5 ways to protect your brain | Prof Ed Bullmore · June 11, 2026
Gum Disease Directly Linked to Accelerated Dementia Risk Through Brain Inflammation
ZOE Science & Nutrition
ZOE Science & Nutrition
What inflammation is really doing to your mind, body and 5 ways to protect your brain | Prof Ed Bullmore
"The links between dental inflammation and brain aging and whether, you know, gum disease is contributory to risk of dementia. Sounds slightly outlandish when you first think about it. And we've talked mostly about the psychiatric disorders of, let's say, children, adolescents, and adults. But I think we need to also think hard about the role of inflammation in brain aging and how inflammation in the brain can accelerate dementia."
Bullmore reveals emerging evidence linking gum disease to increased dementia risk through inflammatory pathways. He explains that inflammation from periodontal disease becomes systemic, reaching the brain and accelerating cognitive decline. This connection has been missed because dentists and medical doctors operate in separate silos with no communication between their practices.

About this episode

In this episode of Zoe: Science and Nutrition, host Jonathan Wolf speaks with Professor Ed Bullmore, a leading psychiatrist at King's College London, about groundbreaking research connecting bodily inflammation to depression, anxiety, and other mental health conditions. Bullmore argues that the traditional separation between mind and body in medicine is scientifically obsolete, presenting evidence that inflammatory hormones from anywhere in the body can cross into the brain and directly alter mood-regulating neural circuits. He reveals that approximately 30% of severe depression cases have a significant inflammatory component, yet doctors continue prescribing antidepressants within minutes without screening for physical causes like obesity, gum disease, poor gut health, or chronic inflammation. The conversation challenges foundational medical school teaching, particularly the myth that the blood-brain barrier completely protects the brain from immune system activity. Bullmore explains how the immune system's response to threats—whether infections, obesity, stress, or aging—triggers inflammation that can manifest as depression, fatigue, and cognitive decline. He connects rising mental health issues to modern lifestyle factors including ultra-processed foods, sedentary behavior, and poor microbiome health. The episode covers multiple inflammation triggers: obesity's fat tissue inflammation, microbiome imbalances, periodontal disease (which Bullmore links to dementia risk), menopause-related metabolic changes, and childhood stress that programs long-term immune responses. Bullmore presents evidence that exercise performs equally to antidepressants in clinical trials, and that Mediterranean diet patterns reduce both inflammation and depression. He acknowledges being skeptical of practices like yoga and meditation 15 years ago but now considers them plausible interventions given the mind-body connection. The discussion reveals how medical specialization—separating psychiatrists, general practitioners, and dentists—has created blind spots preventing holistic treatment of conditions with both physical and mental symptoms.

Key takeaways

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