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The true scientific reasons for crowded or crooked teeth and what you can do to achieve a naturally straight smile both in baby and adult teeth.
Scientists have suggested several different theories over the decades as to what causes crooked teeth in humans.
When my Dad started medical school in the late 1940s, he was taught that racial mixing (Italians marrying Irish for example) was the cause of crooked teeth.
Malocclusions had just started to reach epidemic proportions in children at that time.
Of course, this theory of racial mixing causing crooked teeth which were incidentally presented as fact to the wide-eyed medical students of the time is completely ridiculous and has long since been disproven.
Other theories include thumb sucking and consuming soft foods which are suppositions subscribed to by many orthodontists.
The soft food theory suggests that because humans don’t exercise their jaw muscles enough that our jaws have become weak and narrowed over time.
One orthodontist once told me (while I struggled to keep a straight face) that wisdom teeth were being genetically “selected out” of the gene pool because they are no longer needed because of the different foods that humans now eat compared with ancestral societies.
Now comes a variation of the “soft food causes crooked teeth” theory which was recently described in a study published in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
This new theory states that the movement of humans from hunter-gatherers to farmers around 10,000 years ago put us on the inevitable road to the orthodontist’s chair.
To test this hypothesis, Noreen von Cramon-Taubadel, an anthropologist at the University of Kent in the UK, examined the skull and jaw shapes of ancient skeletons housed in museums that originated from Africa, Australia, Europe, and North/South America.
Six of the populations lived by farming and five were hunter-gatherers.
A significant correlation existed between how a population obtained its food and the shape of the jaw. Hunter-gatherers had narrower and more jutting lower jaws whereas those of the agriculturalists were shorter and wider.
The shape of the upper jaw and palate also varied somewhat between the farmers and hunter-gatherers.
Von Cramon-Taubadel concludes by suggesting that the transition to farming and an increase in food processing both of which led to the consumption of softer foods resulted in a shorter and weaker human jaw.
“Jaw shortening” leads to greater crowding of the teeth.
To lend support to her theory, von Cramon-Taubadel refers to preliminary studies of animals that show that those that are raised on softer more processed foods develop smaller jaws than those raised on fresh, unprocessed diets.
Katerina Harvati, an anthropologist at the University of Tubingen in Germany says that this recent paper by von Cramon-Taubadel is a “well thought out piece of research and an important contribution” to understanding how the way humans live affects their body shape.
She goes on to say, “These findings confirm long-held ideas that the dietary shift to softer foods was an important influence affecting facial and dental morphology.” (1)
The “Soft Food” Theory
Strong contradictory evidence to the soft food theory as a reason for crooked teeth is presented in Dr. Weston A. Price’s book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration.
How this convincing evidence was completely ignored as part of this supposedly “well thought out piece of research” is rather surprising and I would think, downright embarrassing for the author.
While hunter-gatherers certainly had strong jaws which allowed them to consume hard foods, the strength did not come from greater exercising of the jaw muscles! As suggested by Sally Fallon Morell, President of the Weston A. Price Foundation, such a theory makes the critical mistake of confusing muscle with bone.
A narrowed jaw and palate, for example, can be identified in babies at birth long before they have chewed anything!
Dr. Price also correctly pointed out that when the jaw and palate are narrowed, other parts of the skeleton are correspondingly narrowed as well such as the pelvic opening which causes greater difficulty in childbirth and the chest cavity which crowds the vital organs.
The Swiss farmers studied by Dr. Price subsisted on very soft foods and yet had beautifully broad palates with perfectly straight teeth.
Moreover, the South Sea Islanders photographed by Dr. Price with perfectly straight teeth consumed primarily seafood and poi, both soft foods with poi, in particular, a very soft and sticky staple carbohydrate in their diet.
The Truth About Crooked Teeth
Von Cramon-Taubadel did get one aspect of her paper correct. The rise of food processing did indeed contribute to the modern epidemic of crooked teeth, but not because such foods are softer than unprocessed foods.
Rather, processed and industrialized foods are devoid of the critical nutrients necessary to produce a broad and sturdy jaw with correspondingly straight teeth.
How to Get Naturally Straight Teeth
Dr. Price’s research compellingly argues that a lack of jaw development and crooked teeth is entirely nutritional in origin such as attempting to build a wide bridge with substandard materials. (2)
Without essential nutrients in the form of minerals and the fat-soluble activators A, D, and K2 which were abundant in primitive diets, the jaw and palate cannot form with enough strength to support a broad facial structure.
No surprise that the pregnancy diet of ancestral women was rich in all three of these palate-widening nutrients, but these nutrients in their natural, synergistic form are woefully low in prenatal diets of today. Prenatal supplements do not adequately fill the gap either as these pills are largely synthetic and not easily absorbed.
Traditional cultures ensured that a fat soluble-rich diet continued throughout a child’s early years as well. This guaranteed straight baby teeth as well as uncrowded adult teeth.
The easiest way to ensure a child gets enough is with a daily dose of high vitamin cod liver oil and a K2 supplement such as butter oil, natto extract, or emu oil. Vetted brands listed here.
Hence, the narrowing of the face and crooked teeth in the majority of modern children is the result of a nutritionally deficient diet. This is the case no matter what the hardness of weaning foods, thumb-sucking or pacifier use, or whether the baby was breastfed and for how long.
(1) Blame Your Crowded Teeth on Early Farmers, Wired
(2) The Right Price, The Weston A. Price Foundation
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Avoiding Root Canals
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Wisdom Tooth Extractions
Francesca Tropea via Facebook
Hmmmm, this isn’t anything that I haven’t read before, but I’m trying to see how accurate this is in my own life. I have excellent teeth- perfectly straight, white, no cavities…my husband, on the other hand has a long face, narrow palate, and somewhat extensive dental work. And yes, we were raised with different eating habits, so that would seem to ring true. However, our older 2 children both had beautiful baby teeth, but lots of crowding and issues with crookedness when the adult teeth came in. My 14 year old just got braces last month and had an expander when she was about 8. My 2nd child will likely need that too. Both have healthy teeth otherwise, which I attribute to our diet. My younger 3 children have much better spacing though and their adult teeth are coming in nicely…the only exception is the youngest, because he hasn’t yet lost a tooth as he is only 4. Anyway, I may not have eaten as well with the first 2, but I never really ate badly, and didn’t stray from eating the way I was raised, which produced my good teeth. So, where does genetics play in this? Why do my two children who look the most like my husband, also have his facial/mouth structure and the children who most look like me, have mine? Truly interested in all of this.
ElizaBeth
GENETICS! My oldest and youngest have their father’s jaw shape and teeth. Penty of room with no need for braces. My middle daughter is like me narrow jaw and pallete. We’re in our 2nd year of braces for her, nothing esle could possibly “fix” the malalignment in her mouth. And she did have to have a “spreader” in for two months to open up her upper pallete to allow for propper tooth alignment. My middle child is my healthiest eatter and I ate the healthiest while pregnant with her. Nothing in these studies matches up with our family or our extended families.
Anna Mallik via Facebook
http://facefocused.com/
Anna Mallik via Facebook
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=fjCXJLwAutk
Lyndsey Stang via Facebook
This explains my husband’s teeth being naturally straight with his mom always serving fresh food and my Paki friend whose mom never used processed food as well. Neither one of her brothers needed braces either. Then there is my Indian friend who needed a retainer but she grew up eating a diet of basically just beans, oil and rice. Not very healthy.
KS
I am disappointed that this article didn’t mention the importance of extended breastfeeding in the development of straight teeth. Breastfeeding past 1 year is a huge factor that should not have been over looked.
Real Granola via Facebook
In ALL of the primitive peoples that Dr. Price studied, none had crooked teeth.
Dawnielle Callaway Westerman via Facebook
I dont know….I had braces for 3 yrs and my face is fine. no doubt that diet is extremely important, but I would still do braces if needed. which will be I was a chronic thumb sucker and the 2 out of our 5 that were thumb suckers will defiantly need them
uxordepp
Something I noticed years ago, when looking at photos from the Civil War era was that no one (among those photographed) seemed to have crooked teeth, or even missing ones.
At the time I attributed this to a higher rate of breastfeeding, but perhaps the diet was as much of a factor.
Michelle
With the processed food takeover there will never be a shortage of orthodontic clients. Perhaps I should consider a change of career. 🙂