# Oral-heart axis from pregnancy and postpartum: maternal oral microbiota relates with cardiac reverse remodeling

**Authors:** Juliana Morais, Maria João Azevedo, Ana Filipa Ferreira, Bernd W. Brandt, Egija Zaura, Mark J. Buijs, Adelino F. Leite-Moreira, Carla Ramalho, António Barros, Inês Falcão Pires, Benedita Sampaio-Maia

PMC · DOI: 10.1080/20002297.2026.2647506 · Journal of Oral Microbiology · 2026-03-24

## TL;DR

This study shows that a mother's oral bacteria during pregnancy are linked to how well her heart recovers after giving birth.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific oral bacteria associated with postpartum cardiac reverse remodeling.

## Key findings

- Porphyromonas during pregnancy predicts less favorable heart recovery after delivery.
- Higher levels of certain oral bacteria after birth correlate with better heart recovery.
- Microbiota-cardiac associations were confirmed independently of diet.

## Abstract

Emerging evidence links the oral microbiota to cardiovascular health, but this relationship remains poorly understood during pregnancy. Here, we investigated associations between the oral microbiota, cardiovascular physiology, and diet during and after pregnancy.

Salivary microbiota from 65 women in the 3rd trimester and 6 months postpartum were analyzed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Cardiovascular function was assessed via echocardiography, endothelial function by EndoPATTM, nitric oxide levels by plasma nitrate/nitrite levels, and diet through the Food Frequency Questionnaire.

Left ventricular end-diastolic volume (LVEDV) was negatively associated with nitrite-reducing bacteria, namely, Prevotella, at both time points. Cluster analysis identified two reverse-remodeling profiles, one with poorer remodeling, greater postpartum weight retention and higher pregnancy microbial richness enriched with inflammation-associated genera that persisted postpartum. Higher Porphyromonas abundance during pregnancy predicted smaller postpartum LVEDV reductions. At postpartum, in the healthier cluster, Neisseria correlated with left ventricular mass changes and Parvimonas correlated with ΔLVEDV. Multivariate models confirmed independent microbiota–cardiac associations, while regression analyses did not support a clear diet–microbiota–cardiac axis.

In conclusion, the salivary microbiota profile was associated with cardiovascular physiology during pregnancy and with postpartum cardiovascular recovery. These findings warrant confirmation in larger cohorts to clarify their clinical relevance.

This study suggests that mothers’ oral health during and after pregnancy is related to the cardiac reverse remodeling process:

The presence of Porphyromonas during pregnancy predicts less favorable heart recovery after delivery.
After birth, higher levels of bacteria associated with oral health were linked to greater recovery of heart structure and function.

The presence of Porphyromonas during pregnancy predicts less favorable heart recovery after delivery.

After birth, higher levels of bacteria associated with oral health were linked to greater recovery of heart structure and function.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** inflammation (MESH:D007249)
- **Chemicals:** nitrite (MESH:D009573), nitric oxide (MESH:D009569), nitrate (MESH:D009566)
- **Species:** Prevotella (genus) [taxon 838], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13021013/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13021013