68 Harley Street London, W1G 7HE · Main Office
Also at Cromwell & Syon Bishops Wood · Multiple Locations
0203 9838 001 Call for Appointments
jessica@oneheartclinic.com Rapid Response to Enquiries
Expert London Cardiologist for your Heart Health
If you take blood-thinning or antiplatelet medication, you may have questions before your dental appointment. This guide explains what to expect, when it is safe to proceed, and how to have an informed conversation with both your dentist and your cardiologist.
The clinical recommendations on this page are based on the Management of Dental Patients Taking Anticoagulants or Antiplatelet Drugs (SDCEP, 2nd Edition, March 2022) — a NICE-accredited guideline produced by NHS Education for Scotland and endorsed by the Royal Colleges of Surgeons and the College of General Dentistry. They reflect current best practice in the UK.
The advice depends on which type of medication you take and the extent of the dental procedure being planned. The categories below cover the most common cardiac medications.
If you take aspirin on its own for heart disease, continue taking it as usual before and after dental treatment. Your dentist should proceed without interrupting your medication. Some minor additional bleeding is expected and will be managed with gauze and pressure.
If you take two antiplatelet drugs together (common after a stent or heart attack), continue both. Your dentist should expect some prolonged bleeding and will take extra care with stitching and packing. Stopping either drug — especially in the months after a stent — carries serious cardiac risk.
For routine dental procedures (fillings, scale-and-polish, simple extraction), continue your DOAC as normal. For more complex procedures such as multiple extractions or dental implant surgery, you may be asked to miss or delay your morning dose on the day — but the drug is resumed the same evening. You should never stop it for several days.
If your INR (blood clotting level) is within your normal therapeutic range and below 4.0, continue warfarin and proceed with dental treatment. Your INR should ideally be checked within 24–72 hours before the procedure. If your INR is 4.0 or above, non-urgent dental work should be deferred until it is back within range.
Taking both an anticoagulant and an antiplatelet drug together (sometimes prescribed after a valve replacement or complex coronary procedure) carries a higher bleeding risk. Your dentist should consult your prescribing cardiologist or GP before proceeding with any invasive treatment to agree a safe plan.
If you are on a low (prophylactic) dose, dental treatment can proceed without interruption. If you are on a higher treatment dose (e.g. for a recent clot or bridging therapy), your dentist should seek advice from your specialist before proceeding.
In the following situations, anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy must not be interrupted for dental work under any circumstances. Even a brief lapse in treatment carries risk of catastrophic events.
In all these situations, the risk of stopping medication — even briefly — far exceeds any risk from dental bleeding. If your dentist asks you to stop your medication in these circumstances, please contact Dr Nijjer's practice before doing so.
After a coronary angioplasty and stent procedure (also called percutaneous coronary intervention or PCI), you will be prescribed dual antiplatelet therapy — typically aspirin together with clopidogrel, ticagrelor or prasugrel. These drugs are essential to prevent the stent from clotting (a condition called stent thrombosis), which can cause a sudden, life-threatening heart attack.
Stent thrombosis is rare but devastating — the risk is highest in the first few weeks and months after the procedure, and it occurs with particular frequency if antiplatelet therapy is stopped abruptly, even for a short period. The risk is not zero even after the initial period has passed.
The key message: If you are told by any clinician to stop your antiplatelet tablets before a dental procedure and you have had a stent within the last 3–6 months — or are uncertain how long ago your stent was placed — please contact Dr Nijjer's practice immediately before making any change. Telephone: 0203 9838 001.
Patients with mechanical (metallic) heart valves — whether in the mitral or aortic position — are at particularly high risk of valve thrombosis if anticoagulation is reduced or interrupted. This is why the guidance is emphatic: warfarin should not be stopped for dental treatment.
Metallic heart valves are highly thrombogenic — meaning blood naturally wants to clot on their surface. Warfarin prevents this. If the INR falls too low, or warfarin is stopped, a clot can form on the valve within hours to days.
A mitral valve thrombosis is particularly dangerous because the mitral valve handles the main flow of oxygenated blood from the lungs into the heart. A clot here can obstruct this flow, causing acute heart failure or a stroke, and can be rapidly fatal without emergency surgery.
The risk is higher for mitral valves than for aortic valves, and higher for older ball-and-cage type valves than for modern bileaflet valves — but no mechanical valve is safe without anticoagulation.
For these reasons, warfarin should never be stopped before dental procedures, and any INR instability should prompt urgent communication between your dentist and cardiologist.
| INR Result | Action |
|---|---|
| Below 2.0 Below therapeutic range | Contact cardiologist INR is subtherapeutic — thrombosis risk is elevated. Inform Dr Nijjer before dental work. |
| 2.0 – 3.9 Therapeutic range (most patients) | Proceed with dental work Continue warfarin. Do not adjust dose. Dentist uses local haemostatic measures. |
| 4.0 or above Above therapeutic range | Defer non-urgent treatment Defer non-urgent dental work. For urgent treatment, refer to secondary dental care. Contact your anticoagulation clinic. |
INR should be checked ideally within 24 hours before a procedure, or within 72 hours if your INR is known to be stable. Never ask your anticoagulation clinic to adjust your warfarin downward simply in advance of dental work without speaking to your cardiologist first.
In the past, some patients with mechanical valves were temporarily switched from warfarin to injectable heparin before dental work. Current evidence does not support this for dental procedures. Bridging therapy for dental work is not routinely recommended and introduces unnecessary risk. If you have been advised to bridge, please discuss this with Dr Nijjer.
The relationship between oral health and cardiovascular disease is well established. Keeping your mouth healthy is not merely cosmetic — for cardiac patients, it is an important part of long-term heart health management.
Periodontal (gum) disease causes chronic low-grade inflammation throughout the body. This systemic inflammation contributes to the progression of atherosclerosis — the build-up of fatty deposits in the coronary arteries that underlies heart attack and angina. Treating gum disease reduces the burden of inflammation.
Poor oral hygiene and untreated dental infections allow bacteria to enter the bloodstream (bacteraemia). In patients with damaged or prosthetic heart valves, this can trigger infective endocarditis — a serious infection of the valve lining that requires prolonged hospitalisation and sometimes emergency surgery.
Seeing your dentist regularly for check-ups and hygienist appointments means small problems — early decay, gum inflammation, early periodontal disease — are caught and treated before they become serious. Preventing the need for major interventions is especially valuable if you are on blood-thinning medication.
Brushing twice daily with fluoride toothpaste, flossing or using interdental brushes, and avoiding sugary drinks all reduce your risk of dental disease. Dry mouth — a common side effect of many cardiac medications — increases decay risk, so staying well hydrated and using fluoride rinses can help.
At your cardiology review appointments, do mention if you have had any dental infections, extractions, or significant dental work since your last appointment. Dental procedures are a known trigger for transient bacteraemia, and this information may be relevant to your ongoing cardiac care.
Smoking, poorly controlled diabetes, and a high-sugar diet are risk factors for both heart disease and periodontal disease. Addressing these modifiable risks benefits both your oral and cardiovascular health simultaneously.
Many patients with heart conditions ask whether they need a course of antibiotics before dental work to prevent infective endocarditis. The current position in the UK, based on NICE guidance (CG64, updated 2016), may surprise you.
NICE does not recommend routine antibiotic prophylaxis before dental procedures for patients at risk of infective endocarditis — even those with prosthetic heart valves, a history of endocarditis, or congenital heart disease. This guidance applies across the UK.
The rationale is that the evidence for prophylactic antibiotics preventing endocarditis through dental procedures was found to be weak, and the widespread use of antibiotics carries its own risks including antibiotic resistance and allergic reactions. NICE concluded that the potential harms outweigh the uncertain benefits for routine dental work.
NICE identifies the following patient groups as at elevated risk of infective endocarditis, and advises these patients — and their treating clinicians — to be particularly vigilant:
NICE emphasises that for high-risk patients, the most important protection against endocarditis is maintaining excellent oral hygiene:
A note on individual clinical judgement: NICE guidance represents national best practice but does not override an individual clinician's assessment. In some circumstances — for example, if you are undergoing a complex invasive dental procedure and have had previous endocarditis — your cardiologist may exercise clinical judgement and recommend prophylaxis. If in doubt, please discuss with Dr Nijjer before your appointment.
Being well prepared helps both you and your clinical team. These are the questions most worth raising before any invasive dental procedure.
Dr Nijjer's team can provide a written summary of your cardiac medications and advice for your dentist, or answer specific questions before you proceed. Please contact the practice with any concerns.