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Periodontal Care · Milpitas, CA

Gum Disease Symptoms in Milpitas, CA

Spotting the warning signs of gum disease early can save your teeth, protect your overall health, and prevent thousands of dollars in treatment. Our Milpitas office helps you recognize the signals before permanent damage begins.

  • Early-stage detection focus
  • Digital X-rays & Pearl AI
  • Same-week urgent visits
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Dentist examining gum health and checking for gum disease symptoms in Milpitas, CA
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Gum disease often develops silently, without pain. Because it rarely hurts in the early stages, it is easy to overlook until serious damage has already begun. Led by Dr. Gaganjot Khera, DDS — America’s Best Dentist 2024, 2025 and 2026 — our Milpitas team helps patients catch periodontal disease early and treat it before it costs you teeth.

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Stage 1 · Reversible

Early Warning Signs of Gingivitis

Gingivitis is the mildest and most reversible stage of periodontal disease. These early symptoms should prompt a same-week dental evaluation at our Milpitas office — caught here, the damage can be undone completely.

Bleeding Gums

Watch for: Gums that bleed when brushing, flossing, or eating hard foods — pink in the sink or blood on the floss.
Why it happens: Bacterial plaque irritates the tissue, causing inflammation that makes gums fragile. Healthy gums should never bleed from normal care.
Action: Schedule a dental cleaning and exam — bleeding signals infection that needs treatment.

Red, Swollen or Puffy Gums

Healthy look: Firm, pale-pink gums that hug each tooth snugly like a collar.
Diseased look: Red, dark-red, or purplish gums that appear swollen, puffy, or shiny from inflammation.
Why it matters: Color and texture changes are your body’s inflammatory response to a bacterial infection at the gum line.

Tender or Sensitive Gums

Watch for: Gums that hurt when touched, feel sore, or react to temperature. Discomfort while brushing or flossing.
Significance: Pain-free gums are normal. Any tenderness suggests inflammation from an underlying infection.
Action: Improved home care plus a professional cleaning usually reverses tenderness at this stage.

Persistent Bad Breath

Watch for: Bad breath (halitosis) that doesn’t clear with brushing, flossing, or mouthwash — often with a constant unpleasant taste.
Why it happens: Bacteria in infected gums produce foul-smelling gases. Morning breath is normal; all-day halitosis points to infection.
Note: Bad breath can also flag cavities or other issues, but periodontal disease is a leading cause.
Stage 2 · Below the Gum Line

Symptoms of Early Periodontitis

When gingivitis progresses untreated, it becomes periodontitis. These symptoms mean the infection has spread below the gum line and bone loss is beginning.

Receding Gums

Watch for: Teeth that look longer than before, gums pulling away and exposing the root, or notches appearing at the gum line.
Why it’s serious: Recession exposes sensitive roots, raises cavity risk, and signals that bone loss has started. It is irreversible without treatment.
Measured in mm: Recession beyond 1–2mm warrants prompt periodontal care.

Gum Pockets or Separation

Watch for: Gaps forming between teeth and gums, or a feeling of “spaciness” where the gums no longer fit tightly.
Clinical measure: Healthy pockets measure 1–3mm; 4mm marks the watch zone and 5mm or deeper indicates active periodontitis.
Why it matters: Deep pockets shelter bacteria your toothbrush can’t reach, accelerating bone loss.

Increased Tooth Sensitivity

Watch for: Sharp pain with hot, cold, sweet, or acidic foods, and sensitivity when brushing near the gum line.
Cause: Receding gums expose tooth roots, which lack protective enamel and sit close to the nerve.
Action: A periodontal exam can confirm whether recession — not just enamel wear — is driving the sensitivity.

New Spacing Between Teeth

Watch for: Gaps opening up between teeth that weren’t there before, or food packing into new spaces.
Why it happens: As supporting bone is lost, teeth drift and separate — an early structural warning.
Action: Deep cleaning through scaling and root planing can halt progression at this stage.
Stage 3 · Immediate Care Needed

Moderate to Advanced Periodontitis

These symptoms indicate significant damage and call for prompt professional intervention at our Milpitas office to save the teeth involved.

Loose or Shifting Teeth

Watch for: Teeth that move when pushed with the tongue, a changing bite, or new gaps between teeth.
Significance: Bone loss has reached the point where teeth are losing support — an emergency that needs immediate treatment.
Risk: Untreated, loose teeth eventually fall out or require extraction.

Pain When Chewing

Watch for: Aching or sharp pain when biting down, or teeth that feel “different” under pressure.
Why it happens: Inflamed gums, bone loss, and unstable teeth create pain during normal function.
Action: Don’t chew around it — persistent chewing pain warrants a same-week evaluation.

Pus or Gum Abscesses

Watch for: White, yellow, or greenish discharge between teeth and gums, small “pimples” on the gums, or a salty, foul-tasting drainage.
Significance: Pus means active bacterial infection. Abscesses need prompt drainage and treatment.
Emergency: Gum abscesses can spread — seek emergency dental care right away.

Changes in Bite or Fit

Watch for: Partial dentures or bridges that no longer fit, or teeth that meet differently when you close.
Cause: Bone loss and tooth shifting alter bite alignment and jaw relationships over time.
Action: If dental work stops fitting, have the supporting gums and bone checked — the fit change is a symptom, not just wear.
The Silent Trap

Symptoms People Miss or Ignore

“My gums don’t hurt, so I’m fine”

Gum disease usually progresses painlessly until advanced stages. Lack of pain does not mean absence of disease — silent infections cause the most damage precisely because they go untreated. Regular dental exams catch trouble before symptoms appear.

“My gums have always bled a little”

Occasional bleeding brushed off as “I floss too hard” is the most commonly dismissed sign. Healthy gums never bleed — any bleeding indicates inflammation that deserves a professional look.

Gradual changes you adapt to

Gum disease advances over months or years, so you quietly adjust to slow shifts in gum appearance, tooth position, or breath. Comparing today’s smile to photos from a year or two ago often reveals recession you hadn’t noticed.

“It’s just aging”

Receding gums and tooth loss are not an inevitable part of getting older. While periodontal disease is more common with age, proper care prevents it at any age. Nearly half of U.S. adults over 30 show signs of gum disease, yet most cases are preventable.

Quick Self-Check

Do You Have Gum Disease Symptoms?

Answer these honestly, then read the guide below. This self-check does not replace a professional diagnosis — it simply tells you how soon to book with our Milpitas team.

  1. Do your gums bleed when brushing or flossing?
  2. Are your gums red, swollen, or tender?
  3. Do you have persistent bad breath?
  4. Are your gums pulling away from your teeth?
  5. Do your teeth appear longer than before?
  6. Do you have any loose teeth?
  7. Has your bite changed or teeth fit differently?
  8. Do you feel pain when chewing?
  9. Do you see pus between teeth and gums?
  10. Are new spaces developing between teeth?
  11. Do partial dentures fit differently than before?
  12. Are your teeth sensitive to hot or cold?
0 yesLow risk. Maintain great hygiene and regular checkups.
1–2 yesPossible early gingivitis. Schedule a dental evaluation.
3–5 yesLikely gingivitis or early periodontitis. Book treatment promptly.
6+ yesProbable moderate–advanced periodontitis. Seek care now.
Know Your Risk

Factors That Increase Symptom Severity

Even without current symptoms, these factors raise your risk and can accelerate how quickly periodontal disease progresses.

Smoking & tobacco2–7× higher risk and slower healing.
DiabetesDiabetics are about 3× more likely to develop gum disease.
Genetics & family historySusceptibility can run in families.
Hormonal changesPregnancy, menopause, and puberty raise sensitivity.
Dry-mouth medicationsReduced saliva lets bacteria thrive.
Poor nutritionLow vitamin C weakens gum tissue.
Chronic stressWeakens immune response to infection.
Grinding & crowdingBruxism and crooked teeth are harder to keep clean.
Timing Matters

When to See a Dentist

Use these tiers to gauge how quickly to act. When in doubt, call our Milpitas office — the front desk can help you triage over the phone.

Within 2 weeks

Routine Appointment

  • First-time bleeding when brushing or flossing
  • Mild gum redness or swelling
  • Persistent bad breath despite good hygiene
  • Minor gum sensitivity
Within 3–5 days

Urgent Appointment

  • Bleeding daily or with minimal contact
  • Noticeable gum recession
  • Moderate pain when chewing
  • Significant color changes in the gums
Same day

Emergency Care

  • Severely loose teeth
  • Pus or an abscess on the gums
  • Extreme pain or swelling
  • Fever with gum symptoms or trouble swallowing
What to Expect

Your Gum Disease Evaluation

At your Milpitas visit, Dr. Khera reviews your symptoms and performs a thorough periodontal assessment to stage the disease accurately and build the right plan:

  • Visual examination — checking gum color, texture, and how firmly tissue attaches to each tooth.
  • Periodontal probing — measuring pocket depths (healthy 1–3mm, disease 4mm+).
  • Digital X-rays — detecting bone loss that isn’t visible during a visual exam.
  • Bleeding index — noting how many sites bleed when gently probed.
  • Mobility assessment — testing whether any teeth have loosened.
  • Bite evaluation — checking for shifts in tooth alignment.
  • Medical history review — identifying risk factors and whole-body health connections.

From there, care may range from a targeted cleaning to scaling and root planing or a broader gum disease treatment plan — always matched to your stage and delivered right here at our Milpitas office.

Stage by Stage

Why Catching It Early Matters

Typical ranges below are for general education only. Your actual plan and investment depend on your exam findings at our Milpitas office and your insurance.

Stage 1 · Gingivitis

Fully Reversible

  • Reversible with treatment and better home care
  • Simple professional cleaning
  • No bone loss yet
Typically $100 – $200
Stage 2 · Early Periodontitis

Controllable

  • Deep cleaning (scaling & root planing)
  • Prevents further bone loss
  • Ongoing periodontal maintenance
Typically $800 – $1,600
Stage 3 · Advanced

Permanent Damage

  • May require surgery
  • Possible tooth replacement
  • Damage already done is not reversible
Often $5,000 – $15,000+
More Than Your Mouth

Gum Disease & Overall Health

These symptoms can signal more than dental problems. Research links untreated periodontal disease to serious whole-body conditions — so treating your gums helps protect your entire body.

Answers

Gum Disease Symptom FAQs

Common questions we hear from patients across Milpitas, Fremont, and San Jose.

What are the early warning signs of gum disease?
The earliest signs are bleeding gums when brushing or flossing, red or puffy gums, tenderness, and persistent bad breath. These point to gingivitis, the reversible first stage. Catching it here means treatment is simple and the damage can be fully undone.
Can gum disease symptoms come and go?
Yes. Symptoms can seem to improve temporarily, but the underlying infection persists and worsens without treatment. A quiet spell does not mean the disease has resolved — it usually means it has moved deeper below the gum line.
Why don’t my gums hurt if I have gum disease?
Gum disease often progresses painlessly until advanced stages. A lack of pain does not mean the absence of infection. Silent cases actually cause the most damage because they go untreated the longest, which is why regular exams matter so much.
Is it normal for gums to bleed sometimes?
No. Healthy gums do not bleed during normal brushing or flossing. Any bleeding indicates inflammation and infection that deserves a professional evaluation, even if it seems minor or only happens occasionally.
Can I reverse gum disease symptoms at home?
Gingivitis symptoms can be reversed with a professional cleaning plus improved brushing and flossing at home. Once the disease progresses to periodontitis, professional treatment such as scaling and root planing is required — home care alone cannot rebuild lost support.
How quickly do gum disease symptoms progress?
It varies. Some people move from gingivitis to periodontitis within months, while others take years. Smoking, diabetes, and genetics all speed up progression, so risk factors matter as much as the symptoms themselves.
How deep should healthy gum pockets be?
Healthy gum pockets measure 1 to 3 millimeters deep. A reading of 4mm is the watch zone, and 5mm or deeper signals active periodontitis. We measure pocket depths at your evaluation to stage the disease precisely.
Where can I get a gum disease evaluation in Milpitas?
Signature Smiles Dental Group at 440 E Calaveras Blvd in Milpitas offers comprehensive gum evaluations with digital X-rays and pocket-depth probing. Call (408) 946-0777 or book online, and we will help you determine the right next step for your gum health.

Don’t Ignore the Warning Signs

Early detection and treatment prevent tooth loss and protect your overall health. Schedule your comprehensive gum evaluation with Dr. Khera today at our Milpitas office.

440 E Calaveras Blvd, Milpitas, CA 95035 · New patients welcome · Contact us · Insurance accepted

This page is for general educational purposes and is not a substitute for professional dental diagnosis or treatment. Any cost ranges shown are illustrative only; your treatment and investment depend on your examination findings. Please consult Dr. Khera for advice specific to your situation.