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I want you to feel clearer about what this treatment usually involves, what may affect your case, and how to protect the long-term health of your gums, bone, and smile.

Dr. Angel Rodriguez, DDS, CAGS, MSD

Dr. Angel Rodriguez wrote this guide to help you understand how this topic may apply to you, what usually affects the treatment decision, and what the next step could look like if you want specialist guidance.

A deep cleaning, or scaling and root planing, is the most common non-surgical treatment for gum disease. Where a routine cleaning removes deposits from the visible tooth surface, scaling and root planing works inside the periodontal pockets that form as disease progresses. It is a treatment for active disease, not a more thorough version of preventive care.

What scaling and root planing involves

Scaling removes bacterial deposits from below the gum line, inside established periodontal pockets. Root planing smooths the root surfaces so that tissue can re-attach and bacteria have a less hospitable surface to recolonize. The depth of access is what distinguishes it from a routine cleaning.

Who needs a deep cleaning

Scaling and root planing is indicated for patients with periodontitis: pocket depths that exceed what a standard cleaning can reach, bleeding on probing, and bone loss visible on imaging. Continuing to provide routine cleanings to a patient with active disease means the source of the infection is never addressed.

If a deep cleaning has been recommended but you have not yet seen a specialist, a specialist assessment can confirm whether non-surgical care is the right starting point for your case.

The right diagnosis determines whether a deep cleaning is what your case needs.

PIHP provides specialist-level diagnostic clarity: pocket charting, imaging, and a treatment plan grounded in what the tissue actually requires.

Request more info → Return to gum disease treatment

How the procedure works

The procedure is performed under local anesthesia, typically divided by quadrant or half-mouth per appointment. A combination of ultrasonic scalers and fine hand instruments is used to remove deposits and smooth root surfaces. Most patients describe the active treatment as comfortable once anesthesia is established.

Some tenderness in the days after each appointment is normal. There is no wound care and no meaningful restriction on daily activities.

What results look like

Results are assessed at a re-evaluation appointment several weeks later. In an appropriately selected case, scaling and root planing typically produces measurable pocket-depth reduction as inflammation resolves. Bleeding decreases and the tissue tightens around the root.

Scaling and root planing does not reverse bone loss that has already occurred. It eliminates the active bacterial environment driving further loss and creates conditions for the tissue to stabilize. Maintaining that stability requires ongoing periodontal maintenance.

Deep cleaning vs regular cleaning

Routine cleaningDeep cleaning (scaling and root planing)
PurposePreventive careDisease treatment
Where it worksTooth surface and slightly below the gum lineInside established periodontal pockets
AnesthesiaNot typically requiredLocal anesthesia for each treatment area
Recommended forPatients with healthy gumsPatients with active periodontitis
Follow-upReturn to routine hygiene scheduleRe-evaluation, then periodontal maintenance

Understanding whether this is right for your case

Not every patient presenting with gum concerns needs a deep cleaning. Some cases respond to routine hygiene improvements; others may need surgical access beyond what non-surgical care provides. A specialist assessment determines the right approach based on what the tissue actually shows.

If you value a careful specialist opinion before making a decision about your care, request more information and my team can help you take the next step.

If you are still comparing options, these guides cover the next questions patients usually ask before requesting more info.

Return to the landing page if you want to request more info or get more specific guidance for your situation.