Tennessee Dental Hygiene Association Annual Session | Featured Education

Apr 28, 2026 | Events

We’re excited to highlight the Tennessee Dental Hygiene Association (TDHA) Annual Session, where leading voices in dental hygiene and periodontal care come together to share the latest in clinical education.

This event features Katrina Sanders, RDH, presenting two courses focused on modern periodontal therapy, inflammation, and the oral-systemic connection.

Her sessions emphasize:

• Understanding periodontal disease as a bacterial infection
• The role of inflammation in overall health
• Evidence-based clinical decision-making
• Practical strategies for improving patient outcomes

Events like TDHA continue to elevate the standard of care by bringing forward-thinking education to dental professionals across the country.


👉 View Full Schedule: https://tndha.com/schedule/
👉 View Speakers: https://tndha.com/speakers/

You may also like…

The Latest

Who Should Be Tested with MicrobeLink Dx®? | 11-Microbes DNA-PCR Test

Who Should Be Tested with MicrobeLink Dx®? | 11-Microbes DNA-PCR Test

🦠 Not every patient needs bacterial testing… but the right ones do.With MicrobeLink Dx®, you can identify the patients most at risk—catching infection early and preventing bigger problems down the road. Who should be tested?✔️ Patients with bleeding gums (an early...

The Oral-Systemic Link: How Gum Disease Impacts Heart Health

The Oral-Systemic Link: How Gum Disease Impacts Heart Health

Your Gums and Your Heart Are More Connected Than You Think For years, gum disease was thought to stay in the mouth.Today, research continues to show something very different. Oral bacteria don’t just live in the gums—they can enter the bloodstream and impact the...

Multiple Sclerosis and Oral Bacteria: What the Research Is Showing

Multiple Sclerosis and Oral Bacteria: What the Research Is Showing

What Do Oral Bacteria Have to Do with Multiple Sclerosis? For years, gum disease was thought to stay in the mouth.But research continues to show something very different. Certain oral bacteria—especially Fusobacterium nucleatum (Fn)—are now being studied for their...