
rateme.
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Before Fixing an Overbite, Understand What Causes It
An overbite can be genetic, but it’s also influenced by habits like thumb sucking, nail biting, prolonged pacifier use, tongue-thrusting, and mouth breathing.
Bad habits during growth years = bad jaw development.
Why You Shouldn’t Ignore It
Leaving an overbite untreated can lead to:
Get Diagnosed First (You can’t fix what you don’t understand.)
Book an appointment with a dentist or orthodontist → they’ll take X-rays and possibly a 3D scan to see whether it’s skeletal or dental.
This step matters because the right treatment depends on the cause.
Treatment Options (Ranked)
1. Palate Expansion (Best Structural Fix)
3. Clear Aligners (Invisalign, etc.)
4. Orthognathic Surgery
Supportive At-Home Work
Not medical advice. Always research your options and confirm with a qualified orthodontist.
If you want me to make new guide tell me (my first time)
An overbite can be genetic, but it’s also influenced by habits like thumb sucking, nail biting, prolonged pacifier use, tongue-thrusting, and mouth breathing.
Bad habits during growth years = bad jaw development.
Why You Shouldn’t Ignore It
Leaving an overbite untreated can lead to:
- Jaw pain, TMJ issues, and headaches
- Gum recession & tooth decay
- Bone loss over time
- Chewing and speech problems
- Weaker facial aesthetics (receded jaw, narrow face)
Get Diagnosed First (You can’t fix what you don’t understand.)
Book an appointment with a dentist or orthodontist → they’ll take X-rays and possibly a 3D scan to see whether it’s skeletal or dental.
This step matters because the right treatment depends on the cause.
Treatment Options (Ranked)
1. Palate Expansion (Best Structural Fix)
- Widens your upper jaw by applying outward pressure on the palate.
- In teens: splits the midpalatal suture for natural bone growth.
- In adults: requires SARPE (Surgically Assisted Rapid Palatal Expansion).
- Improves bite, breathing, and facial width.
- Timeframe: 3–6 months active + retention phase.
- Moves teeth and encourages better jaw positioning.
- Faster and less invasive than surgery in moderate cases.
- Avoid “camouflage orthodontics” (premolar extractions) — it straightens teeth but worsens facial recession.
3. Clear Aligners (Invisalign, etc.)
- Good for mild dental overbites, discreet, removable.
- Not effective for skeletal issues.
4. Orthognathic Surgery
- For extreme skeletal overbites in adults.
- Permanently repositions jaws for ideal alignment.
- Long recovery, but life-changing in severe cases.
Supportive At-Home Work
- Mewing: Keep tongue on the palate, mouth closed, breathe through your nose.(don’t fix anything just don’t make things worse)
- Jaw exercises: Chin tucks, gum chewing, resistance openings.
- Myofunctional therapy: Corrects tongue thrust & mouth breathing habits.

If you want me to make new guide tell me (my first time)
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