Periodontal Disease
Diagnosis and treatment for gingivitis and periodontitis — from non-surgical scaling and root planing in-house to coordinated specialist care for advanced cases.
Overview
Periodontal disease is gum disease — chronic inflammation of the tissues that support the teeth, driven by bacterial plaque and tartar that have not been cleared. It progresses in stages, from gingivitis (the earliest, reversible form) through periodontitis to advanced periodontitis, where the supporting bone is lost and teeth can loosen or fall out. Catching it early makes a meaningful difference in what treatment looks like.
Stages, Briefly
Gingivitis. Red, swollen, easily bleeding gums; no bone loss yet. Reversible with professional cleaning and improved home care.
Periodontitis. Pockets begin forming between teeth and gums; some bone loss; more involved cleaning needed.
Advanced periodontitis. Significant bone loss; teeth can loosen, drift, or be lost without intervention.
Treatment at Diamond Dentistry
How aggressive the treatment plan is depends on how far the disease has progressed:
Early-stage cases are handled in-house with scaling and root planing (SRP) — a deeper, targeted cleaning that removes tartar from below the gumline and smooths the root surfaces so the gums can reattach.
Moderate cases may add a course of antibiotics, focused on the specific bacterial profile in the periodontal pockets.
Advanced cases needing surgical periodontal therapy are coordinated with a trusted periodontal specialist. Dr. Rowland will tell you up front when a referral is the right call and help arrange it.
Why Treatment Is Worth It
Stops the bone and gum loss that ultimately costs teeth
Reduces bleeding, swelling, and bad breath tied to chronic infection
Lowers systemic inflammation linked to cardiovascular disease and diabetes complications
Catching it early prevents far more expensive restorative work later
Other Procedures
Bone Grafting
A grafting procedure that rebuilds jawbone volume so it can support a future dental implant or denture.
Gum Grafting
Gum graft surgery that rebuilds tissue lost to recession from periodontal disease, aggressive brushing, or chronic clenching and grinding.
Gum Lift
An in-office laser procedure (also called gum sculpting) that reshapes excess gum tissue to balance a 'gummy' smile and reveal more tooth.
Request an Appointment
Tell us what you are interested in and our team will follow up with next steps.
