D
Denkaren
Iron
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2025
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I’ve been working but I felt the need of lecturing some dickheads in this thread.
I think we can all agree that the maxilla has a major impact on facial aesthetics. It is essentially the central structural platform of the midface. When the maxilla is recessed, narrow, and rotated clockwise, it will contribute to several visible features, a nose that appears disproportionate, lip incompetence, low and flattened cheek support, dental crowding, reduced under-eye support, and overall midface deficiency.
This is why I’m strongly critical of orthodontic approaches, particularly retractive mechanics with braces(which basically 98% is). In my own case, I experienced significant facial changes during orthodontic treatment, this was years before my jaw surgery. I lost masseter fullness, under-eye support decreased, and my face appeared older and less supported overall. From an aesthetic standpoint, the impact was substantial.
It’s important to fucking know that the alveolar bone is the tooth-bearing portion of the maxilla, it is not separate from it. When teeth are retracted to match the bite, they move within the alveolar bone. Since the alveolar process is part of the maxilla, this movement will change dental and soft-tissue support, particularly lip posture and midface projection.
Study regarding regular orthodontics:
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
~Anterior alveolar bone, width and height decreases after orthodontic treatment.
Study regarding alveolar bone change after premolar extractions:
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
~Human re-entry studies showed horizontal bone loss of 29-63% and vertical bone loss of 11-22% after 6 months following tooth extractions. This was followed by gradual reductions in dimension thereafter.
HOW would braces after alveolar bone loss NOT worsen facial appearance. Use your common fucking sense.
It’s A PART of your jaw and maxilla for the love of god. Where the fuck do you think the support comes from? What do you think happens once you lose much of this support. Will it rest on thin air or can it possible be that the alveolar bone plays a bigger part than this fraudulent dentist/orthodontist warns about?
Your face will sink like the fucking titanic.
It makes your teeth and bite good TEMPORARILY(Your fucking faggot teeth has cell memories, they will move back unless you have a retainer for the rest of your life which also will contribute to bone loss), at the cost of your function and overall aesthetics. I’m tired of being mr nice guy adapting to incels thinking they now everything. You’re a bunch of dweebs.
@lurking truecel
@Nahorscend
@jester
@Oliebol
@yussimania
I think we can all agree that the maxilla has a major impact on facial aesthetics. It is essentially the central structural platform of the midface. When the maxilla is recessed, narrow, and rotated clockwise, it will contribute to several visible features, a nose that appears disproportionate, lip incompetence, low and flattened cheek support, dental crowding, reduced under-eye support, and overall midface deficiency.
This is why I’m strongly critical of orthodontic approaches, particularly retractive mechanics with braces(which basically 98% is). In my own case, I experienced significant facial changes during orthodontic treatment, this was years before my jaw surgery. I lost masseter fullness, under-eye support decreased, and my face appeared older and less supported overall. From an aesthetic standpoint, the impact was substantial.
It’s important to fucking know that the alveolar bone is the tooth-bearing portion of the maxilla, it is not separate from it. When teeth are retracted to match the bite, they move within the alveolar bone. Since the alveolar process is part of the maxilla, this movement will change dental and soft-tissue support, particularly lip posture and midface projection.
Study regarding regular orthodontics:
Morphological changes of the anterior alveolar bone due to retraction of anterior teeth: a retrospective study - PMC
To analyze the morphological changes of the anterior alveolar bone after the retraction of incisors in premolar extraction cases and the relationship between incisor retraction and remodeling of the alveolar base represented by points A and B ...
Study regarding alveolar bone change after premolar extractions:
A systematic review of post-extractional alveolar hard and soft tissue dimensional changes in humans - PubMed
Human re-entry studies showed horizontal bone loss of 29-63% and vertical bone loss of 11-22% after 6 months following tooth extraction. These studies demonstrated rapid reductions in the first 3-6 months that was followed by gradual reductions in dimensions thereafter.
HOW would braces after alveolar bone loss NOT worsen facial appearance. Use your common fucking sense.
It’s A PART of your jaw and maxilla for the love of god. Where the fuck do you think the support comes from? What do you think happens once you lose much of this support. Will it rest on thin air or can it possible be that the alveolar bone plays a bigger part than this fraudulent dentist/orthodontist warns about?
Your face will sink like the fucking titanic.
It makes your teeth and bite good TEMPORARILY(Your fucking faggot teeth has cell memories, they will move back unless you have a retainer for the rest of your life which also will contribute to bone loss), at the cost of your function and overall aesthetics. I’m tired of being mr nice guy adapting to incels thinking they now everything. You’re a bunch of dweebs.
@lurking truecel
@Nahorscend
@jester
@Oliebol
@yussimania
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