Osteoporosis & Bone Loss Management in Beverly Hills

What Is Osteoporosis and Bone Loss Management in Periodontics?

Osteoporosis and bone loss management in periodontics is the specialized evaluation, treatment, and long-term care of women whose systemic bone loss affects the jawbone, gums, teeth, and dental implants. Generally, osteoporosis and its earlier stage, osteopenia, cause bones throughout the body to become thinner and more fragile, including the alveolar bone that supports the teeth and anchors implants. As a result, women with bone loss face a significantly higher risk of periodontal bone loss, tooth loss, implant complications, and specific challenges related to the medications used to treat osteoporosis.

Typically, we recommend specialist periodontal evaluation for any woman with osteopenia, osteoporosis, a strong family history of bone loss, or who is taking bone-affected medications like bisphosphonates, denosumab, or related therapies. In fact, the connection between systemic bone health and oral bone health is real, well-documented, and often overlooked in routine dental care, which is exactly why specialist evaluation matters.

Notably, patients come to us when their primary care doctor, gynecologist, or endocrinologist has recommended dental clearance before starting bone medication, when they want a periodontist who understands the complexities of treating patients on bisphosphonates, or when they want a proactive, biologically minded plan to protect both their jaw and their broader skeletal health.

Benefits, Why MD Periodontics

Why patients choose us

  • Specialist understanding of systemic bone loss, we recognize how osteoporosis affects the jaw differently than other bones and tailor care to your specific bone health profile
 
  • Pre-medication dental clearance, in addition, we provide a comprehensive evaluation that many physicians require before patients begin bisphosphonates, denosumab, or other bone-affected medications
 
  • MRONJ awareness and prevention, notably, we understand medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw, the rare but serious complication of certain bone medications, and we design care that minimizes risk
 
  • Coordinated care with your medical team; furthermore, we partner closely with your primary care doctor, gynecologist, endocrinologist, or rheumatologist when your case calls for it
 
  • Implant planning for bone loss patients, in fact, we use advanced 3D imaging, regenerative techniques, and PRF to support successful implants in patients with reduced bone density
 
  • Whole body wellness focus, we view your jaw as part of your skeletal system and your skeletal health as part of your overall wellness, not separate concerns
 
  • Beverly Hills specialist expertise, Dr. Moshrefi has decades of experience treating complex bone loss cases, and Dr. Daneshmand brings USC-trained precision, holistic philosophy, and the perspective of a female specialist to every plan we design together

Who Is a Candidate?

Generally, most women with diagnosed bone loss, a strong family history, or who are taking bone-affected medications benefit from a specialist periodontal evaluation. The right plan depends on your bone density, medications, dental history, and overall health, all of which we evaluate carefully.

You may be an ideal candidate if you:

  • Have been diagnosed with osteoporosis or osteopenia
  • Are about to start bisphosphonates, denosumab, or other bone-affected medications
  • Are currently on bone medication and need ongoing dental care
  • Are perimenopausal or menopausal and concerned about bone loss
  • Have a strong family history of osteoporosis or hip fracture
  • Have noticed gum recession, loose teeth, or jaw changes
  • Have one or more dental implants and want long-term monitoring during bone loss
  • Are working with an endocrinologist, rheumatologist, or functional medicine doctor
 

However, women on long-term IV bisphosphonates, those with active MRONJ, or those with complex medical situations may need additional medical coordination before certain dental procedures, which we manage carefully and openly with your medical team.

The Process

1. Comprehensive Evaluation and Bone Health Review

First, we begin with a thorough exam, full medical history review, and a detailed conversation about your bone density results, medications, hormonal stage, and broader wellness goals. In addition, we coordinate with your prescribing physician when needed. As a result, every step of your care is aligned with your broader bone health plan.

2. 3D Imaging and Periodontal Assessment

Next, we use a 3D cone-beam CT scan, when indicated, to evaluate your jawbone density, periodontal bone levels, and any areas of concern. Then we measure pocket depths, assess gum tissue, evaluate any existing implants, and identify early signs of bone loss before they become serious.

3. Personalized Treatment Plan

After that, we map out your case together, including any needed periodontal therapy, regenerative procedures, implant planning, or pre-medication dental clearance. Furthermore, when bone-affecting medications are involved, we carefully plan timing and coordinate closely with your prescribing physician.

4. Targeted Care and Bone Supportive Therapy

Then, depending on your case, treatment may include gentle scaling and root planing, PRF-supported regenerative grafting, careful extraction protocols, implant placement tailored to reduced bone density, or close monitoring of existing implants. In fact, treatment is precision-targeted to your specific bone health and medication profile.

5. Long-Term Bone Awareness Maintenance

Finally, we design a personalized periodontal maintenance schedule, typically every 3 to 4 months, with ongoing monitoring of bone levels through imaging and clinical evaluation. As a result, your care evolves with your bone density and medication status across the years.

Recovery and What to Expect

Generally, recovery depends on which treatments your case requires. Notably, evaluation, imaging, and routine maintenance involve no downtime. On the other hand, when active treatment is needed, recovery follows the timeline of that specific procedure, with extra attention to healing in patients on bisphosphonates.

Aftercare basics

  • First, follow the specific aftercare for whichever procedure your treatment involves
  • Also, support bone health with calcium, vitamin D, vitamin K2, and bone supportive nutrition under your physician’s guidance
  • Brush gently with a soft-bristle toothbrush and floss daily, focusing on plaque control
  • In addition, address any dry mouth with hydration and recommended saliva supportive products
  • Notably, schedule periodontal maintenance every 3 to 4 months for ongoing monitoring
  • Coordinate with your medical team if your bone medication or dose changes
  • Avoid smoking and excessive alcohol, both of which dramatically worsen bone loss
  • Continue weight-bearing exercise as approved by your physician, which supports bone density everywhere, including the jaw
  • Stay consistent with your osteoporosis treatment as prescribed by your doctor
  • Finally, return promptly for any new oral symptoms, including loose teeth, gum recession, or jaw pain

When to call the office

Call us right away if you experience exposed bone in the mouth, persistent jaw pain, non-healing extraction sites, loose teeth, new numbness or tingling in the jaw, drainage from the gums, or any oral symptom that does not resolve within a week. In addition, call before any planned dental work elsewhere if you are on bone-affected medications so that we can coordinate properly.

FAQ

Generally, osteoporosis thins bone throughout the body, including the alveolar bone that supports the teeth and the jawbone that anchors implants. In fact, women with osteoporosis have significantly higher rates of periodontal bone loss, tooth loss, and implant complications than women with normal bone density. Notably, the jaw is not separate from the rest of the skeleton, and protecting both is part of comprehensive bone health.

Generally, osteoporosis thins bone throughout the body, including the alveolar bone that supports the teeth and the jawbone that anchors implants. In fact, women with osteoporosis have significantly higher rates of periodontal bone loss, tooth loss, and implant complications than women with normal bone density. Notably, the jaw is not separate from the rest of the skeleton, and protecting both is part of comprehensive bone health.

Yes, in most cases. In fact, the American Dental Association and most prescribing organizations recommend a comprehensive dental evaluation before starting bisphosphonates, denosumab, or other bone-affected medications. Notably, this allows any needed dental work to be completed beforehand, dramatically reducing the risk of complications during medication therapy.

What is MRONJ and should I be worried?

MRONJ is a rare condition in which the jawbone fails to heal properly after dental treatment in patients taking certain bone medications. The risk is low for most patients with osteoporosis, but we carefully plan treatment and preventive care to minimize complications.

Often, yes. In fact, modern research shows that dental implants can be successful in women with osteoporosis when planned carefully by a specialist. Notably, we use 3D imaging, regenerative grafting, PRF, and careful surgical protocols to optimize implant success in patients with reduced bone density. However, women on IV bisphosphonates or with active MRONJ may not be candidates, which we evaluate honestly.

Not without your prescribing physician’s guidance. In fact, stopping medication without medical oversight can put you at risk for serious bone complications, including hip and spine fractures. Notably, current evidence does not support the routine discontinuation of oral bisphosphonates before most dental procedures. As a result, we coordinate carefully with your physician to determine what is right for your specific case.

Generally, routine X-rays are deferred during pregnancy when possible. In fact, modern digital dental X-rays use very low radiation doses and are considered safe when truly needed, especially with protective shielding. However, we use only the genuinely necessary imaging and always discuss the decision openly with you and your obstetric team.

Most dental insurance plans offer partial coverage for periodontal evaluation, treatment, and maintenance, and many medical plans cover specific evaluations when medically necessary. However, coverage varies widely. Also, our team verifies your benefits and explains your out-of-pocket costs clearly before treatment begins.

Generally, they share risk factors and contribute to one another. In fact, both involve chronic inflammation and bone loss, and women with osteoporosis are at significantly higher risk of periodontitis. Notably, treating gum disease helps reduce overall systemic inflammation, which supports broader bone health, and treating osteoporosis helps preserve the jawbone that supports the teeth.

Yes. In fact, the rapid bone loss that follows menopause affects the jaw as much as other bones in the body. As a result, perimenopausal and menopausal women are in one of the most important windows for proactive periodontal evaluation and bone awareness care. Notably, this is when many women first develop both osteoporosis and accelerated periodontal bone loss together.

Generally, the same lifestyle changes support both, including adequate calcium and vitamin D intake, weight-bearing exercise, smoking cessation, limited alcohol, anti-inflammatory nutrition, and stress management. In fact, vitamin K2 and magnesium are increasingly recognized as supportive of both bone and oral health. As a result, we integrate nutrition and lifestyle guidance into every plan, in coordination with your medical team.

Usually, yes, with careful protocols. In fact, the vast majority of extractions in patients on oral bisphosphonates for osteoporosis heal without complications. Notably, we use minimally traumatic extraction techniques, socket preservation grafting, PRF, and antimicrobial protocols to support healing. However, we always evaluate your individual risk and coordinate with your prescribing physician before proceeding.

Generally, we recommend periodontal maintenance every 3 to 4 months for women on bone-affected medications. In fact, this allows us to monitor for early signs of complications, quickly catch any healing concerns, and protect your long-term oral and bone health. Notably, this is significantly more frequent than the twice-yearly cleaning many women receive, and the increased frequency genuinely matters.

Periodontists are dental specialists trained specifically in the bone and supporting tissues of the teeth, and we bring deep expertise in regenerative therapy, implant planning for patients with bone loss, and the protocols needed to safely treat patients on bone medications. In fact, this is exactly the work Dr. Moshrefi and Dr. Daneshmand do every day at MD Periodontics, in partnership with your broader medical team.

Yes. Notably, bone health is one of the most powerful examples of how oral health connects to whole body health, the heart of biological and holistic dentistry. In fact, treating the jaw as part of the skeletal system, integrating nutrition and lifestyle support, coordinating with your medical team, and using biologic therapies like PRF and biocompatible materials are all expressions of the same philosophy. As a result, this page represents one of the most aligned applications of our entire practice approach.

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Question OneWhat brings you to us?

What brings you to MD Periodontics?

Choose the option that fits best, even if it isn't exact.

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Question TwoHow extensive?

How extensive is the concern?

Your best estimate is enough.

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Question ThreeHow long?

How long has this been on your mind?

Duration helps us understand urgency and complexity.

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Question FourPast treatment?

Have you had treatment for this before?

Past care shapes the right next step.

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Question FiveYour priority

What matters most to you in your care?

There are no wrong answers, only the right plan for you.

Reviewing
Building your personalized plan
Your Plan

Recommended Treatment

Recommended Procedures
    Recommended Specialist
    This plan is a guide, not a diagnosis. Your final treatment plan will be confirmed during a comprehensive consultation, where imaging, examination, and your full health history shape the approach. Treatment investment is discussed with you transparently at that visit, before any care begins.
    Question 1 of 5