# Curcumin in oral health: mechanisms, clinical evidence, and delivery strategies

**Authors:** Chengchen Hu, Shengguo Wang, Zhi Gao, Maofeng Qing, Lian Tan, Lu Yang, Fang Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2025.1661443 · Frontiers in Pharmacology · 2026-03-02

## TL;DR

Curcumin, a compound from turmeric, shows promise as an adjunct therapy in treating various oral diseases due to its anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial properties.

## Contribution

This review systematically summarizes curcumin's mechanisms, clinical applications, and delivery strategies in oral health.

## Key findings

- Curcumin reduces plaque and gingival inflammation in periodontal disease, comparable to chlorhexidine.
- It decreases fungal burden in oral candidiasis and enhances photodynamic therapy outcomes.
- Curcumin modulates inflammatory cytokines and the oral microbiome in early oral cancer studies.

## Abstract

Curcumin, a polyphenolic compound derived from the turmeric rhizome (Curcuma longa), has attracted significant interest in dentistry and oral medicine because of its multifaceted therapeutic properties. In particular, curcumin exhibits potent anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial activities that are relevant to a wide spectrum of oral diseases. We conducted a narrative search of PubMed (2000–2025) using iterative keyword combinations related to curcumin and oral diseases/mechanisms, screened reference lists, and selected studies on the basis of their relevance to oral pathobiology, delivery systems, and clinical/translational outcomes. This narrative review summarized the current knowledge concerning the molecular mechanisms of curcumin and its clinical applications in oral health. We outlined how curcumin modulates key inflammatory pathways and oxidative stress responses, and how it exerts broad-spectrum antimicrobial effects against oral pathogens. We detailed the efficacy of curcumin in specific oral conditions, including periodontal diseases, dental caries, recurrent aphthous stomatitis, oral lichen planus, oral submucous fibrosis, oral candidiasis, radiation/chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis, and oral cancers. In each context, we highlighted evidence from in vitro studies, animal models, and clinical trials, and noted the benefits of curcumin, such as reduced inflammation, enhanced healing, microbial inhibition, and in some cases outcomes comparable to those of standard therapies. Across conditions, curcumin shows adjunctive benefit: In periodontal disease, it reduces plaque and gingival inflammation comparable to chlorhexidine and improves probing outcomes when added to scaling and root planing; in recurrent aphthous stomatitis, it reduces pain and ulcer size with steroid-like efficacy; in radiotherapy/chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis, it delays onset and decreases severity; in oral candidiasis, it decreases fungal burden and enhances photodynamic therapy; and in oral squamous cell carcinoma early clinical studies show modulation of inflammatory cytokines and the oral microbiome. Various delivery systems developed to overcome the poor bioavailability of curcumin—from mouthwashes and gels to nanocarriers and mucoadhesive formulations—are reviewed. Although many studies reported promising results with minimal toxicity or side effects, there were study limitations such as small sample sizes, variability in formulations, and the pharmacokinetic properties of curcumin. Overall, the reviewed data support the role of curcumin as a safe, formulation-dependent adjunct—not a stand-alone therapy—in oral medicine.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** curcumin (PubChem CID 969516)
- **Diseases:** dental caries (MONDO:0005276), oral lichen planus (MONDO:0043923), oral submucous fibrosis (MONDO:0018166), oral candidiasis (MONDO:0005886), oral mucositis (MONDO:0004842)
- **Species:** Curcuma longa (taxon 136217)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** oral squamous cell carcinoma (MESH:D000077195), gingival inflammation (MESH:D007249), oral cancers (MESH:D009062), oral submucous fibrosis (MESH:D009914), fungal (MESH:D009181), oral lichen planus (MESH:D017676), dental caries (MESH:D003731), periodontal disease (MESH:D010510), oral diseases (MESH:D009059), ulcer (MESH:D014456), oral mucositis (MESH:D013280), toxicity (MESH:D064420), pain (MESH:D010146), aphthous stomatitis (MESH:D013281), oral candidiasis (MESH:D002180)
- **Chemicals:** steroid (MESH:D013256), Curcumin (MESH:D003474), chlorhexidine (MESH:D002710)
- **Species:** Curcuma longa (turmeric, species) [taxon 136217]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989600/full.md

## References

152 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989600/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989600