Respiratory Infections & Oral Bacteria Aspiration
Aspirated oral bacteria are a leading cause of pneumonia, especially in older adults, ventilated patients, and people with swallowing difficulty. Hospital-acquired pneumonia mortality drops by ~40% with rigorous oral hygiene programs, making oral care one of the highest-leverage infection-control interventions in healthcare.
The Connection
Periodontal pockets harbor billions of bacteria. Tiny aspirations during sleep deliver these organisms into the lower airway, where they can colonize and cause pneumonia in vulnerable hosts. Mechanical ventilation amplifies the risk dramatically.
Why Coordination Matters
Hospitalists, ICU teams, and nursing home staff should treat oral hygiene as core infection prevention, and dentists should advocate for institutional oral care protocols.
What to Watch For
- Recurrent pneumonia in older adults
- Heavy tongue coating in hospitalized patients
- Difficulty swallowing
Frequently Asked Questions
Can mouth bacteria cause pneumonia?
Yes — aspirated oral bacteria are a leading cause of pneumonia, especially in older adults. Rigorous oral hygiene cuts hospital-acquired pneumonia mortality by ~40%.