The Mouth-Gut Connection: How Oral Health Impacts Digestion
Your mouth is home to a diverse microbial ecosystem, just like your gut. A balanced oral microbiome plays a crucial role in maintaining overall health, but when harmful microbes take over, the impact can extend far beyond your teeth and gums.
Toxic Burden from Amalgams and Root Canals
If you have amalgam fillings or root canals, you may be unknowingly exposing your body to chronic toxicity and harmful bacteria. Amalgam fillings contain mercury, which can slowly release vapours and accumulate in the body, contributing to systemic inflammation and gut dysfunction. Root canals, on the other hand, can harbour pathogenic bacteria in the tiny tubules of the tooth, creating a breeding ground for infection that your immune system constantly has to fight.
Every time you swallow, you may be ingesting harmful bacteria and toxins, which can disrupt your gut microbiome and trigger digestive distress. Over time, this can contribute to leaky gut, inflammation, and microbial imbalances that make it harder for your digestive system to function properly.
Oral Microbiome Imbalance and Low Stomach Acid
A healthy mouth has a balance of beneficial and opportunistic microbes. But when this balance is lost—often due to poor diet, excessive mouthwash use, dental procedures, or chronic infections—harmful bacteria and fungi can overgrow.
As we swallow these microbes, they travel down into the stomach, where stomach acid is meant to neutralise them. However, chronic exposure to pathogenic bacteria can interfere with stomach acid production, leading to low stomach acid (hypochlorhydria).
Low stomach acid allows harmful microbes to survive and thrive in the stomach, leading to overgrowths of bacteria and fungi that would normally be kept in check. This can set the stage for conditions like Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO), bloating, reflux, and malabsorption of essential nutrients like iron, B12, and zinc.
The Role of Stomach Acid in Bile Release
Stomach acid doesn’t just help break down food—it also plays a crucial role in triggering bile release from the gallbladder. When stomach acid is low, the signal for bile secretion weakens, leading to poor fat digestion and sluggish bile flow.
Bile is essential for breaking down fats and absorbing fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K), but it also has antimicrobial properties that help keep gut bacteria in balance. When bile flow is reduced, bacteria that should be cleared from the small intestine can start to overgrow, contributing to further digestive dysfunction and symptoms like bloating, nausea, and constipation.
If you’ve been struggling with stubborn digestive issues, addressing your oral health could be a game-changer. Here’s where to start:
✅ Assess Your Dental Work – If you have amalgam fillings or root canals, consider consulting a holistic dentist who can evaluate whether they could be contributing to your health concerns.
✅ Optimise Your Oral Microbiome – Swap out chemical-laden mouthwashes for more natural alternatives or probiotic-based oral care products.
✅ Support Stomach Acid Production – Include digestive bitters, apple cider vinegar, or betaine HCl (under guidance) to help restore optimal stomach acid levels.
✅ Encourage Healthy Bile Flow – Incorporate bile-supporting foods like beetroot, dandelion root, ox bile supplements (if needed), and healthy fats such as ghee and butter.
By taking care of your mouth, you’re not just protecting your teeth—you’re supporting your entire digestive system. If you’ve been stuck in a cycle of digestive distress despite dietary changes, don’t overlook the role that your oral health may be playing. Sometimes, the missing key to healing your gut starts right where digestion begins—in your mouth.