Holistic Dentistry for Pregnant Women

Pregnancy can change the way your gums, teeth, digestion, immune system, and energy levels respond.

Some pregnant women experience bleeding gums, tooth sensitivity, reflux-related enamel wear, food cravings, dry mouth, or sudden dental discomfort.

At kohe™ Holistic Dental Centre, we help pregnant women receive calm, careful, and minimally invasive dental care during pregnancy.

  • Protect your oral health during pregnancy
  • Support safe pregnancy
  • Avoid unnecessary dental intervention

Our Holistic Dentist

Dr Christine Ma is a UK-trained holistic and biological dentist that takes a holistic approach to dentistry.

Why Visit Dr Christine Ma

  • Holistic and biological dentist with a focus on working with conditions experienced by:
    • Pregnant women,
    • Children who have material sensitivities,
    • Patients with medical conditions or allergies and, 
    • Patients who have had previous bad dental experiences.
  • UK-trained dentist who has worked in the United Kingdom for more than 10 years in both public and private service.
  • More than 10 years of experience working with biomimetic and minimally invasive dentistry. 
  • Works with patients who want to correct their oral health in relation to their physical (systemic health).

Should I Head To The Dentist When I Am Pregnant?

Yes, dental care during pregnancy is still important.

Many pregnant women delay dental care because they worry that treatment may affect the baby.

In reality, untreated gum inflammation, tooth decay, infection, or dental pain may create more stress for the body than properly planned dental care.

Pregnancy can increase the risk of gum inflammation and cavities.

The CDC notes that pregnant women may be more prone to gum disease and cavities, and that gingivitis may worsen because of hormonal changes.

We do not rush into treatment. We first assess:

  • Gum inflammation 
  • Tooth decay
  • Dental pain 
  • Existing dental work 
  • Medication history 
  • Your current trimester 
  • Obstetric history
Good looking pregnant woman holding her back while standing by bed at home

Ask Us If Your Dental Concern Can Wait

Routine and emergency dental care can be safe during pregnancy when properly assessed.

If you are unsure as to whether your dental condition is considered a routine and emergency dental procedure, drop us a message.

How Pregnancy Can Affect Your Teeth and Gums

As your body changes during pregnancy, you might start to notice some subtle changes in your teeth and gums.

Pregnancy Gingivitis

Pregnancy hormones can make the gums more sensitive to plaque. This may cause swelling, redness, tenderness, and bleeding during brushing or flossing.

Gingivitis is an early form of periodontal disease that can be worsened by hormonal changes during pregnancy. 

Cavities Because of Snacking

Pregnancy cravings, frequent snacking, nausea, and changes in oral hygiene habits can increase cavity risk.

Pregnancy may increase the risk of oral conditions such as gingivitis and dental caries.

Weakened Enamel from Acid Reflux

Repeated acid exposure from vomiting or reflux can weaken enamel.

This can make teeth feel sensitive, thin, rough, or more prone to decay.

Dry Mouth (Xerostomia)

Some pregnant women experience dry mouth, mouth breathing, sleep disruption, or dehydration.

Saliva helps protect teeth, so reduced saliva may increase plaque and acid risk.

Dental Problems Flaring Up

Pregnancy does not create every dental problem.

However, existing gum disease, leaking fillings, impacted wisdom teeth, root canal issues, or cracked teeth may become more noticeable when the body is under physiological stress.

Teeth Shifting

Pregnancy gum disease can cause teeth to loosen and shift. 

If you have existing missing teeth or teeth with gaps between them, teeth can start to shift and become misaligned.

 

What Makes Our Approach Holistic During Pregnancy?

Holistic dentistry during pregnancy is not about avoiding all dental care. It is about choosing the most appropriate care, at the right time, with the least unnecessary biological burden.
Minimally Invasive Dental Care
We preserve natural tooth structure where possible
Material Awareness
We consider sensitivities, metals, BPA exposure, and material compatibility
Inflammation Control
We do not ignore dental infections or active gum disease.
Medication Caution
We avoid unnecessary medication and provide proper alternatives.
Whole-Body Approach
We consider reflux, nutrition, airway, sleep, stress, and inflammation before treatment.
Biological Materials

We use only biologically safe materials for all dental treatments.

Lifestyle Recommendations

Based on your unique needs, we recommend lifestyle recommendations and improvements.

Lifestyle Recommendations

Based on your unique needs, we recommend lifestyle recommendations and improvements.

Dental Treatments That May Be Considered During Pregnancy

Every pregnancy is different. Treatment decisions should be made after clinical examination and, where needed, discussion with your obstetrician and regular dentist.

Professional guidance states that regular and emergency dental care, including radiographs and local anaesthetics, is safe at any stage during pregnancy.

Gum Disease Treatment
Gentle gum assessment and pregnancy-aware cleaning to help manage bleeding gums, swelling, plaque buildup, and oral inflammation during pregnancy.
Gum Recession Treatment
Careful assessment of receding gums, sensitivity, brushing habits, bite pressure, and inflammation to help protect exposed roots during pregnancy.
Toothache Treatment
Diagnosis-focused care for tooth pain during pregnancy, helping identify decay, cracks, infection, nerve irritation, or bite-related discomfort before planning treatment.
Dental Infection Treatment
Prompt assessment of swelling, pus, severe pain, or dental abscesses, with careful treatment planning to reduce infection risk during pregnancy.
Broken Dental Fillings
Pregnancy-aware repair of cracked, loose, or broken fillings to protect the tooth from further decay, sensitivity, food trapping, or infection.
Reflux Related Enamel Wear Treatment
Supportive care for enamel wear caused by morning sickness, vomiting, or acid reflux, with preventive guidance to reduce sensitivity and tooth weakening.
Wisdom Tooth Pain
Assessment of wisdom tooth pain, gum swelling, food trapping, or infection, with conservative management where possible and urgent care when needed.
Old Dental Work Leaking or Cracked
Review of old fillings, crowns, root canal-treated teeth, and restorations that may be leaking, cracked, sensitive, or causing inflammation during pregnancy.

Dental Treatments That May Be Delayed Until After Birth

Some treatment is best delayed if it is elective, cosmetic, or not clinically urgent.

The decision depends on your symptoms, trimester, risk level, comfort, and dental findings.

Teeth Whitening

Cosmetic teeth whitening is best delayed until after pregnancy, as it is elective and not needed for dental health during this period.

Full Smile Makeovers
Full smile makeovers usually involve multiple appointments and elective aesthetic planning, so they are better completed after pregnancy.
Dental Veneers
Dental veneers are elective cosmetic restorations and can usually wait until after pregnancy, unless there is pain, decay, or tooth damage.
Replacement of Stable Restorations
If an old filling, crown, or restoration is stable and not causing pain, leakage, or decay, replacement can usually wait until after pregnancy.
Major Bite Rehabilitation

Complex bite correction and full-mouth rehabilitation are usually best delayed until after pregnancy because they require longer planning and multiple visits.

Elective Implant Surgery
Dental implant surgery is usually postponed if the missing tooth is stable and not causing infection, pain, or urgent functional problems.
Extensive Amalgam Replacement
Large-scale amalgam replacement is usually better delayed until after pregnancy unless there is pain, fracture, decay, or a clear clinical need.
Elective Orthodontic Treatment
Braces or clear aligners can usually wait until after pregnancy, especially if there is no bite trauma.
Dentists looking at a cranial x-ray at the hospital

Are Dental X-Rays Safe During Pregnancy?

Many pregnant women worry about dental X-rays. In holistic dentistry, we still follow a risk-benefit approach: we only take X-rays when they are clinically necessary.

Professional guidance indicates that dental radiographs in regular and emergency dental care is safe during pregnancy when needed. 

A dental X-ray may be recommended if you have:

  • Dental pain
  • Swelling
  • Suspected infection
  • Deep decay
  • Trauma
  • A broken tooth
  • A root canal concern
  • Gum disease assessment needs

However, do take note that at kohe™ Holistic Dental Centre, we do not take X-rays casually.

We only take them when the diagnostic information changes the diagnosis, safety, or treatment plan.

Trimester-Based Care Guide

Manage urgent pain, infection, nausea-related acid wear, and bleeding gums. Keep appointments comfortable and conservative.

Often the most comfortable time for necessary dental care, depending on the patient’s condition and obstetric advice.

Focus on urgent care, gum stability, shorter visits, comfortable positioning, and avoiding unnecessary lengthy treatment.

Review deferred treatment, gum health, decay risk, sleep changes, nutrition, and long-term dental planning.

What Happens During a Pregnancy Dental Consultation?

Pregnancy and Health History

We ask about your trimester, pregnancy symptoms, medical history, medications, supplements, allergies, and obstetric considerations.

Dental and Gum Assessment

We check for gum inflammation, decay, cracks, infections, old fillings, bite pressure, wisdom tooth issues, and acid wear.

Risk Classification

We separate findings into:

  • Urgent
  • Important but not urgent
  • Monitor during pregnancy
  • Defer until after birth
Pregnancy-Aware Treatment Plan

You receive a clear explanation of what should be done now, what can wait, and what home care changes may help.

Coordination Where Needed

For higher-risk pregnancies, complex treatment, or medication concerns, we may recommend coordination with your obstetrician.

Pregnancy Dental Consultation

How to Protect Your Teeth and Gums During Pregnancy

  Helpful Tips
Bleeding gums Brush gently but do not stop brushing
Nausea Use a smaller toothbrush head if brushing triggers gagging
Vomiting Rinse with water after vomiting before brushing
Reflux Avoid brushing immediately after strong acid exposure
Frequent snacking Reduce constant grazing where possible
Sweet cravings Pair sweet foods with meals rather than repeated snacking
Dry mouth Hydrate regularly
Gum swelling Book a gum assessment
Toothache Do not wait for severe pain
Food trapping Clean between teeth daily if possible
Pregnant young woman on a hospital bed
Pregnant woman lying on the sofa at home

When to See a Dentist Urgently

  • Facial swelling
  • Gum swelling or pus
  • Severe toothache
  • Pain that wakes you up
  • Fever with dental pain
  • Broken tooth with pain
  • Pain when biting
  • Wisdom tooth infection
  • Bleeding gums that worsen quickly
  • Loose tooth or sudden gum abscess

Frequently Asked Questions: Holistic Dentistry for Pregnant Women

Is it safe to see a dentist when I am pregnant?
Should I delay dental treatment until after giving birth?
Are dental X-rays safe during pregnancy?
Can I have dental anaesthetic while pregnant?
Why are my gums bleeding during pregnancy?
Can gum disease affect pregnancy?
Can I remove mercury amalgam fillings while pregnant?
What dental treatment is best avoided during pregnancy?
What if I have tooth pain but I am scared of medication?
Is holistic dentistry better for pregnant women?
Pregnant woman standing at home with headache