Skip to content
Home » Fix The Microbiome: #1 Oral Care Routine To Fix Your Mouth & Disease – The Primal Podcast (Transcript)

Fix The Microbiome: #1 Oral Care Routine To Fix Your Mouth & Disease – The Primal Podcast (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of family and sleep medicine dentist Dr. Mark Burhenne’s interview on The Primal Podcast with host Rina Ahluwalia on “Fix The Microbiome: #1 Oral Care Routine To Fix Your Mouth & Disease”, November 17, 2024.

Introduction to the Oral Microbiome

RINA AHLUWALIA: This episode features Dr. Mark Burhenne and we’re talking about a topic I’ve never discussed on this health podcast, the oral microbiome. Now, what happens in your mouth is closely connected to disease in your whole body. And by the end of the episode, you’ll understand the things that you need to remove to fix your oral health and your overall health.

Now, this information is not what you’re going to hear from Big Food or Big Pharma. So if you’re learning from and enjoying these episodes, please hit the subscribe button because the simple act of subscribing will help share this message to millions more people that need to hear the truth. And now for the interview with Dr. Mark Burhenne. Dr. B, welcome.

DR. MARK BURHENNE: Thank you. Glad to be here.

RINA AHLUWALIA: Most of us have heard that excellent health starts with a healthy gut or a diverse gut microbiome. But this is not exactly true, because our mouth or the oral microbiome is actually your body’s first defense system against good and bad bacteria and also controls inflammation in the entire body. But nobody talks about this.

So in this episode, Dr. B is going to share his 40 years of clinical experience and talk about the mouth or the oral microbiome, how that’s closely linked to high blood pressure, heart disease, even Alzheimer’s disease. We’re going to talk about the perfect oral care routine that is completely free, and also how xylitol can actually protect you against chronic inflammation.

So, Dr. B, my first question. When we think about the mouth, it appears to be very separate from the heart and the brain. So as a functional dentist, why should somebody even care about what’s happening in the mouth?

The Mouth-Body Connection: Why Separation is Harmful

DR. MARK BURHENNE: Well, you took the words right out of my mouth. The mouth is part of the body. Unfortunately, organized medicine, organized dentistry, we’ve separated. That actually happened in the US in 1839. And since then, we’ve been treating and working and researching on kind of in parallel universes.

It’s very frustrating as a dentist. I would think it’s very frustrating as a physician because there’s a lot of… I mean, when they see the number one or one of the major admissions in emergency rooms in the US is toothache, a tooth abscess, and the physicians don’t know what to do. They just prescribe antibiotics and hope that patient goes away and vice versa.

I mean, there are a lot of things that dentists are working on now, like sleep. And we can recognize sleep apnea well before a physician can. So that crossover now is occurring. It’s what I call a connective tissue or an increase in growth of connective tissue between the two professions.

But why is the mouth, and why has the mouth been treated as a separate part of the body? It’s almost like it doesn’t exist. It’s just an opening. And everything past the opening is the gut or the throat or the nasal passages. And unfortunately, that has hampered patient outcomes by thinking that way.

The doctor passes it on to the dentist. The dentist is considered just to be like a carpenter. They’re fixing hard tissue issues, like enamel issues, holes in teeth, and it really goes beyond that. So there’s that little bit of a black hole in the disease, the metabolic disease of gum disease, the number one disease in the world, which is tooth decay. Who’s addressing that?

And because it’s not being addressed in a medical standpoint, in an overall global, systemic, functional way, then it’s really not being addressed properly and it’s like a black hole and everyone’s practicing around it. And the irony is that black hole is causing systemic disease. Alzheimer’s, pancreatic cancer, breast cancer, obviously cardiovascular disease, diabetes. There’s a two way street between diabetes and gum disease, kind of a two way effect.

It’s unfortunate that it’s been this way. Hopefully it’s changing. Obviously the insurance products are separate as well. There’s medical insurance for example. When I retired a few years ago, I’m 65 now and I’m on Medicare, wonderful product by the way. But there’s no dental care.

And I noticed this in my patients when they retired their dental, their oral health went straight down the tubes. These are patients that had great dental insurance through Google, Apple. This is where I was practicing in the Silicon Valley and I literally watched someone get early stages of Alzheimer’s within five years. And obviously I could see the gum disease. The patient wasn’t coming in for regular care.

And gum disease, very simply, the P. Gingivalis bug in the mouth is elevated. It crosses over every second that chronic inflammation is there, it crosses over into the bloodstream, gets across the blood brain barrier and makes the brain, stimulates the brain to lay down amyloid plaque as a reaction to this infection. So separating the mouth from the body has caused a lot of harm and death.

Zero-Cost Solutions for Oral Health

RINA AHLUWALIA: Absolutely. I think that many people think, “Oh great, that’s something else that I have to think of.” But this is zero cost. It’s not going to cost you anything to make these changes because it’s more about subtracting things and not adding things.

I want to talk about those inflammatory conditions that are connected to poor oral health. But first I want people to understand the mouth and the oral microbiome, because this is some fancy terms, the oral microbiome that they need to understand. Can you explain as a functional dentist something that you used to see every single day, the mouth and the oral microbiome. What is that?

Understanding the Oral Microbiome

DR.