Good fit
You notice bleeding gums, gum recession, bad breath, tooth mobility or recurring inflammation.

Periodontal care in Athens
Gum health is the foundation for preserving natural teeth and planning restorative treatment that can last.
Who this helps
International patients often need more than a treatment name. They need to know what is safe, what can wait, what requires examination and what can realistically fit their travel schedule.
You notice bleeding gums, gum recession, bad breath, tooth mobility or recurring inflammation.
You have been told you may have periodontitis and want a careful second opinion in English.
You need periodontal stability before restorative, implant or aesthetic treatment.
Clinical focus
The clinic starts with diagnosis, biology, function and long-term stability. The goal is not to compress every decision into a travel package, but to choose the right sequence.
Visit planning
Mention bleeding, mobility, gum recession or previous periodontal treatment.
Bring recent periodontal or radiographic records if you have them.
The first priority is controlling inflammation and risk.
Pre-arrival orientation
Send one clear photo of the gum or tooth area that concerns you.
This is not a diagnosis and does not replace examination. It helps the clinic understand whether the next step should be an appointment, a request for better photos or a more urgent route.
Appointment request
Add your travel dates, main concern and whether you already have recent photos, X-rays or treatment notes. The request goes directly to the clinic admin.
Prefer to start with photos?Questions
An initial assessment can often be done in one visit, but treatment and maintenance may require staged appointments depending on severity.
Often yes. Gum stability is usually essential before planning long-term aesthetic, restorative or implant treatment.
A clear close-up of the area, gum recession, swelling or bleeding point can help orientation, but periodontal diagnosis requires clinical examination.