Biodental Health and Longevity, a dental practice in Pensacola, Florida, has expanded its clinical offerings to include hyperbaric oxygen therapy and PNOE metabolic breath analysis, positioning itself at the intersection of oral health and systemic longevity medicine. The practice, located at 6105 N Davis Hwy, is led by Dr. Christopher M. Campus, D.M.D., who aims to provide biologic dentistry that treats the mouth as connected to the whole body.
Dr. Campus opened the practice on the premise that oral health impacts systemic health. In addition to standard restorative and cosmetic dental care—such as cleanings, veneers, same-day biomimetic crowns, and metal-free restorations—the practice offers therapies typically found in integrative medicine clinics. These include HOCATT ozone-steam therapy, red light therapy, PRF (platelet-rich fibrin) therapy, and robotic-assisted implant placement. The newly added hyperbaric oxygen therapy and PNOE metabolic breath analysis allow patients to assess and support cellular oxygen utilization and metabolic function during dental visits.
According to Dr. Campus, over 40% of patients seek care at his practice specifically because they want dental treatments that align with broader health protocols. “The mouth is not separate from the body, and a dental visit does not have to be limited to teeth,” he said. “When we added PNOE metabolic analysis and hyperbaric oxygen therapy, we were responding to patients who were already asking those questions.”
The expansion reflects a broader shift in consumer health behavior, with patients actively seeking providers who treat oral health as connected to cardiovascular, immune, and metabolic outcomes. Dr. Campus has structured the practice to meet that demand with clinical infrastructure rather than just marketing language. The practice offers holistic dentistry in Pensacola, FL, and surrounding areas, focusing on biological protocols like ozone therapy, PRF healing support, and toxin-free restorative materials.
Longevity dentistry is still an emerging category, but practices like Biodental Health and Longevity are helping define it in a clinical setting. Rather than offering wellness services as add-ons, the practice integrates them into the patient workflow. For example, a patient receiving an implant consultation might also complete a metabolic breath analysis or undergo red light therapy in the same visit.
Dr. Campus designed the facility and its service menu around the idea that inflammation, immune function, and tissue healing—influenced by systemic health—directly affect dental outcomes. Ozone therapy is used for its antimicrobial properties in dental procedures and as part of broader detoxification and immune support protocols. “We are not trying to be a spa or a supplement clinic,” Dr. Campus said. “We are a dental office that takes seriously the evidence connecting oral pathogens, chronic inflammation, and systemic disease.”
For more information, visit Biodental Health and Longevity.


