
Periodontal maintenance is a specialized clinical hygiene configuration designed explicitly for patients who have completed active therapy for gum disease (like scaling and root planing). It goes significantly deeper than basic cleaning workflows by prioritizing localized subgingival decontamination areas. Our program coordinates systematic pocket depth checking updates, subgingival biofilm removal, and structural bone grid reviews. This 3-to-4 month treatment frequency is clinically mandated by the rapid 90-day re-colonization cycle of active oral pathogens.
Required Frequency: Every 3–4 Months (Based on pathogen cycles)
Once you have navigated periodontal disease, your underlying bone frameworks and pocket architectures have permanently altered. Even following successful therapeutic intervention, the specific aggressive pathogens responsible for tissue degradation re-populate deep pocket spaces within 8 to 12 weeks. Specialized maintenance cleanings at 3-to-4 month intervals are the only clinical way we stay permanently ahead of that biological destruction cycle.

Destructive periodontal pathogens multiply and completely re-colonize treated subgingival pocket spaces within an 8 to 12 week window. Waiting a traditional 6 months allows the bacterial colonies too much un-disrupted time to re-ignite bone reabsorption. A 90-day frequency neutralizes that destruction cycle completely.
Yes. Most premium dental insurance networks explicitly identify the distinct code for periodontal maintenance as a medical necessity for individuals with documented histories of root planing, frequently funding a higher number of annual visits compared to standard cleanings.
Subgingival bacterial biofilms will consolidate and re-trigger tissue destruction cycles within weeks. Patients who routinely drop maintenance frequencies typically encounter silent, pain-free infection relapses that eventually force complex, expensive surgical retreatments downstream.
No. Active deep cleaning (scaling and root planing) is an intensive primary treatment process utilized to eliminate established gum infections. Periodontal maintenance is an ongoing defensive and monitoring security program designed to safeguard those therapeutic results long-term.