How to Improve Your Teeth & Oral Microbiome for Brain & Body Health | Dr. Staci Whitman

How to Improve Your Teeth & Oral Microbiome for Brain & Body Health | Dr. Staci Whitman

Huberman LabMar 24, 20252h 54m

Andrew Huberman (host), Dr. Staci Whitman (guest), Narrator

Oral microbiome and its impact on systemic health (brain, heart, hormones, fertility)Demineralization/remineralization of teeth, diet, and cavity formationFluoride in toothpaste and drinking water: benefits, risks, and alternativesNasal vs. mouth breathing, airway development, and sleep-disordered breathingGum disease, leaky gums, and links to dementia, cardiovascular disease, and cancerPractical oral care: brushing, flossing, tongue scraping, oil pulling, mouthwash, productsChild oral development: breastfeeding, chewing, crowding, tongue-tie, orthodontics

In this episode of Huberman Lab, featuring Andrew Huberman and Dr. Staci Whitman, How to Improve Your Teeth & Oral Microbiome for Brain & Body Health | Dr. Staci Whitman explores transform Your Oral Microbiome: Teeth, Brain, Heart And Hormones Connected Andrew Huberman interviews functional and pediatric dentist Dr. Staci Whitman about how oral health and the oral microbiome impact whole‑body health, including brain function, cardiovascular disease, fertility, and hormones. They explain why most conventional products and habits—alcohol mouthwash, harsh toothpaste, frequent snacking, and mouth breathing—actually damage the oral microbiome and increase disease risk. The conversation covers how teeth naturally demineralize and remineralize, the pros and cons of fluoride versus hydroxyapatite, and how diet, breathing, and basic hygiene can prevent or even reverse early cavities. They also explore links between gum disease and dementia, heart disease, infertility, pregnancy complications, and metabolic health, and provide concrete daily protocols for brushing, flossing, tongue scraping, diet, hydration, nasal breathing, and kids’ oral development.

Transform Your Oral Microbiome: Teeth, Brain, Heart And Hormones Connected

Andrew Huberman interviews functional and pediatric dentist Dr. Staci Whitman about how oral health and the oral microbiome impact whole‑body health, including brain function, cardiovascular disease, fertility, and hormones. They explain why most conventional products and habits—alcohol mouthwash, harsh toothpaste, frequent snacking, and mouth breathing—actually damage the oral microbiome and increase disease risk. The conversation covers how teeth naturally demineralize and remineralize, the pros and cons of fluoride versus hydroxyapatite, and how diet, breathing, and basic hygiene can prevent or even reverse early cavities. They also explore links between gum disease and dementia, heart disease, infertility, pregnancy complications, and metabolic health, and provide concrete daily protocols for brushing, flossing, tongue scraping, diet, hydration, nasal breathing, and kids’ oral development.

Key Takeaways

Stop carpet bombing your mouth: avoid harsh, antimicrobial products that destroy the oral microbiome.

Most people equate burning, foaming products with cleanliness, but common ingredients like sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS), strong essential oils, and alcohol mouthwashes indiscriminately kill good and bad bacteria, irritate oral tissues, and can trigger canker sores. ...

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Leverage your saliva and eating schedule to support natural tooth remineralization.

Teeth constantly cycle between demineralization (after eating when pH drops) and remineralization (as saliva buffers pH and redeposits calcium and phosphorus). ...

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Understand fluoride vs. hydroxyapatite and make a conscious choice for topical use only.

Teeth are mostly hydroxyapatite (calcium + phosphate). ...

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Prioritize nasal breathing day and night to protect teeth, gums, and the brain.

Humans are obligate nasal breathers, but up to ~50% of people chronically mouth-breathe. ...

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Treat bleeding gums and bad breath as systemic warning signs, not just cosmetic issues.

Gum disease (gingivitis to periodontitis) affects an estimated 80% of the global population and creates “leaky gums,” allowing oral pathogens and endotoxins into the bloodstream. ...

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Build a simple, sustainable oral care protocol based on mechanics first, products second.

Core behaviors: floss once daily (ideally at night) before brushing; brush gently with a soft brush for ~2 minutes with non-SLS toothpaste; avoid hard scrubbing and wait 20–30 minutes after meals or vomiting before brushing to avoid brushing softened enamel. ...

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Support kids’ facial and dental development early with chewing, breastfeeding, and airway assessment.

Modern soft, processed diets and reduced breastfeeding have dramatically reduced chewing (from ~4 hours/day ancestrally to ~4 minutes/day now), leading to smaller jaws, narrower palates, deviated septums, and crowding. ...

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Notable Quotes

We’ve been taught that we need to carpet bomb the mouth… but what we’re doing with these products is damaging our delicate microbiome, which can make things far worse.

Dr. Staci Whitman

Your saliva is this golden elixir of your body… if I can make one suggestion to someone struggling with cavities, I want to know not only what are you eating, but how frequently are you eating it.

Dr. Staci Whitman

If fluoridation worked, cavities wouldn’t be the top disease in our country, in our children.

Dr. Staci Whitman

We are one of the only species to get dental decay. Wild animals don’t get decay; our domesticated animals do because of what we’re feeding them.

Dr. Staci Whitman

If you have gum disease, you’re twice as likely to have cardiovascular issues and three times more likely to have a stroke.

Dr. Staci Whitman

Questions Answered in This Episode

For someone who already has several amalgam fillings but normal blood mercury levels, would you still recommend proactive replacement with ceramic/composite materials, or only replace when those restorations fail?

Andrew Huberman interviews functional and pediatric dentist Dr. ...

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If a child has significant crowding and mouth breathing but standard orthodontists recommend waiting until all adult teeth erupt, what concrete steps should parents take now to find and work with a functional orthodontist or airway-focused dentist?

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Given the NTP and Cochrane data you described, what very specific changes to current U.S. fluoridation policy would you consider both realistic and scientifically justified over the next 5–10 years?

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For adults with a strongly deviated septum who can technically nasal breathe but find it difficult, how would you sequence conservative interventions—myofunctional therapy, nasal breathing training, red-light, devices like nasal dilators—before recommending structural procedures like balloon sinuplasty or MSE expansion?

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You mentioned Candida and fungi as under-recognized drivers of early childhood decay; in a child with recurrent cavities and a coated tongue, what exact testing and antifungal or dietary protocol would you use before resorting to aggressive drilling or general anesthesia?

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Transcript Preview

Andrew Huberman

Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Dr. Staci Whitman. Dr. Staci Whitman is a functional dentist with expertise treating both adult and pediatric patients. She focuses on oral health as a key feature of overall gut health and a powerful modulator of brain longevity, heart health, hormones, and fertility in both men and in women. Today, we discuss many of the common myths about tooth and gum care and how to use specific nutrition, breathing, and cleaning methods to repair cavities, whiten teeth, and freshen breath while at the same time improving the oral microbiome. This is very important because as Dr. Whitman explains, most of the things that people do in pursuit of better tooth health and appearance and fresh breath actually damage their oral microbiome and indeed can lead to serious cardiovascular issues. So, today we discuss how to brush, how to floss. I know we've all heard that we need to brush and floss, but Dr. Whitman explains exactly how to do those so that they are of the maximum benefit for our tooth health, gum health, and oral health generally. We also discuss the science and benefits of things like tongue scraping and oil pulling, and we discuss fluoride, which, of course, is a very controversial and timely topic nowadays. It's a very interesting conversation that I believe everyone, young, old, parents, and kids need to be aware of. We also discuss treating things like tongue ties, deviated septums, canker sores, and more. By the end of today's episode, you'll have the most up-to-date knowledge about how to take care of your oral health, both for aesthetic reasons and, of course, to reduce cavities and gum disease, and in doing so, how to support your brain and heart longevity. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, this episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Dr. Staci Whitman. Dr. Staci Whitman, welcome.

Dr. Staci Whitman

Thank you, Andrew.

Andrew Huberman

I'm super excited to talk about oral health from all perspectives. Your public-facing content, especially on Instagram, has completely transformed the way I think about this thing that I call my mouth, that people think of as their teeth and their mouth and their breath and their tongue and all this stuff, as a key site for evaluating and maintaining health of my brain, my body, and today you'll make it clear as to why that's the case. I'd like to just start by looking at this oral health thing through the lens of what I think most people think of when they hear the words oral health, which is people want, it seems, white-ish or very white teeth, depending on their preference. They want fresh breath or at least to not have bad-smelling breath, and they want their mouth to sort of feel good, right? The question I have is what are some of the things that many, many people do in trying to have white teeth, fresh breath that actually are very destructive for our teeth and our oral microbiome? And if we go through, uh, that entry point into this conversation, then we can get into some of the specifics of why that is. So, what's something that you see many people doing in terms of trying to have bright white teeth that actually is harming their teeth?

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