Shrinking jaws trend isn't genetic [(big News) Genetics destroyed] Dr Tony on suicide watch

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JULY 21, 2020

A hidden epidemic of shrinking jaws is behind many orthodontic and health issues, Stanford researchers say​

The shrinking of the human jaw in modern humans is not due to genetics but is a lifestyle disease that can be proactively addressed, according to Stanford researchers.
BY ADAM HADHAZY
For many of us, orthodontic work – getting fitted with braces, wearing retainers – was just a late-childhood rite of passage. The same went for the pulling of wisdom teeth in early adulthood. Other common conditions, including jaw pain and obstructed sleep apnea – when slack throat muscles interrupt breathing during rest – also just seem like par for the course.


A new study says that parents and caregivers can take steps to promote proper mouth, jawbone and facial musculature development in children to help stave off future health burdens and chronic conditions. (Image credit: Getty Images)
The broader scientific community has largely deemed the underlying abnormality behind these problems as hereditary and untreatable, and opted to deal with symptoms through medical devices and after-the-fact interventions.
But in a new study, Stanford researchers and colleagues argue that all these issues and more are actually relatively new problems afflicting modern humans and can be traced to a shrinking of our jaws. Moreover, they maintain that this “jaws epidemic” is not primarily genetic in origin, as previously thought, but rather a lifestyle disease. That means the epidemic is largely the result of human practices and akin to obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and some cancers.
The study – published in the journal BioScience – marshals the growing evidence from studies conducted around the world surrounding the jaws epidemic, as well as how to address it proactively. Parents and caregivers can take steps to promote proper mouth, jawbone and facial musculature development in children, the study advises, to help stave off future health burdens and chronic conditions.
“The jaws epidemic is very serious, but the good news is, we can actually do something about it,” said Paul Ehrlich, the Bing Professor of Population Studies, Emeritus, at Stanford and one of the study’s authors.
The new study builds upon a book Ehrlich co-wrote with orthodontist and lead study author Sandra Kahn entitled Jaws: The Story of a Hidden Epidemic, published by Stanford University Press in 2018. Two other Stanford researchers, Robert Sapolsky and Marcus Feldman, have contributed their expertise to the new study. Seng-Mun “Simon” Wong, a general dentist in private practice in Australia, was also a co-author.

Rooted in lifestyle, not genetics​

Anthropologists have long noted the significant differences between the jaws and teeth in modern skulls compared to pre-agricultural, hunter-gatherer humans from thousands of years ago. The differences are stark even compared to humans who lived as recently as a century-and-a-half ago during pre-industrial times. These bygone humans showed little teeth crowding, impaction of their wisdom teeth (a leading reason for their surgical removal nowadays) or malocclusion – the abnormal positioning of the upper and lower teeth when the mouth is closed.
panoramic x-ray of a healthy jaw
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Paul Ehrlich on the problems of the modern jaw

Paul Ehrlich wants you to shut your mouth – for your health. According to Ehrlich’s new book, mouth breathing, among other modern habits, has led to an epidemic of small jaws and many troubling health consequences.

Assuming that genetics are chiefly responsible for the sudden modern rise of these dental maladies does not make sense, said Ehrlich. “There’s not been enough time for evolution over the span of only several generations to have made our jaws shrink,” said Ehrlich. Nor is there any evidence of selection pressures that would have favored smaller jawed-people producing more offspring – and thus perpetuating the trait – than regular-jawed people.
“The evidence of a genetic contribution to the jaws epidemic is not strong,” said Feldman, who is a population geneticist and the Burnet C. and Mildred Finley Wohlford Professor and professor of biology.
Instead, profound physiological changes can occur in human populations over short intervals, Feldman pointed out, purely as a result of environmental factors, such as dietary choices and cultural norms. For instance, since World War II, a switchover from heavy rice consumption to more dairy and protein in childhood has been linked to Japanese men gaining around 5 inches in average adult height.
This goes to show that in many cases, lifestyle choices can have just as powerful if not more of an influence on human traits than underlying genetics. “A genetic contribution to a trait, if there is one, does not necessarily sentence you to a life with that trait,” said Feldman. “In almost all cases, you cannot intervene medically to alter a genetic contribution; it’s not actionable. But what is actionable are the things talked about in this study, as well as Paul and Sandra’s book.”

Contributing factors​

Available evidence points to the jaws epidemic arising as humanity underwent sweeping behavioral changes with the advent of agriculture, sedentism (settling in one place for extended periods) and industrialization. One obvious factor is the softening of diets, especially with the relatively recent invention of processed foods. Also, less chewing is needed nowadays to extract adequate nutrition – our ancestors certainly did not enjoy the sustentative luxury of slurping down protein shakes.
A less obvious, though more significant reason behind the jaws epidemic, Ehrlich and colleagues contend, has been the rise of what they describe as bad oral posture. Our bones grow, develop and change shape under the influences of gentle but persistent pressures, multiple studies have shown. The proper development of the jaw and its associated soft tissues is guided by oral posture – the positioning of the jaws and the tongue during times when children are not eating or speaking. This positioning is especially important overnight during long sleep stretches, when swallowing maintains the correct, gentle pressures. With both children and adults now sleeping on forgiving mattresses and pillows, instead of the firm ground as their ancestors did, mouths are likelier to fall open, disrupting positioning and swallowing.
To promote the proper development of the jaw, the answer is not to start sleeping on rocks. Rather, basic practices such as having children chew sugar-free gum, as well as giving babies less mushy foods as they transition to solid foods, can help, the researchers say. Kahn and Wong also practice what they call forwardontics, which includes exercises such as proper breathing and swallowing patterns to guide jaw growth in children as young as 2 versus waiting until children are older and require more severe interventions. To raise awareness of the jaws epidemic and how to better address it, Ehrlich and his co-authors have been giving lectures to conventions of orthodontists and seen some positive momentum. “There’s no question that some clinical practices are moving in this direction,” said Ehrlich, “but we have a lot more work to do.”

Better living, starting from the jaw​

Benefits are not just limited to straighter teeth, roomier jaws and stronger oral muscles. Cutting down on sleep deprivation from sleep apnea is another gain, which has myriad knock-on benefits. Sleep deprivation increases stress, which is associated with greater risks of heart disease, high blood pressure, depression, cancer and Alzheimer’s disease in adult populations, and with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children.
“The maladaptive ‘jaws’ profile can disrupt our stress response and ultimately bring about greater stress and chronic activation of the body’s stress response,” said Sapolsky, the John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor and a professor of biology, of neurology and neurological sciences and of neurosurgery, whose research focuses on stress.
Ehrlich hopes that increased attention and research geared toward the jaws epidemic can turn the tide.
“We’re going to continue learning the causes of the jaws epidemic and continue getting the word out on how this is a highly treatable condition early on in life,” said Ehrlich. “Parents and caregivers, in collaboration with dentists and orthodontists, can all help children to avoid some serious health problems later on in their lives.”

@Handsome Truecel
 
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JULY 21, 2020

A hidden epidemic of shrinking jaws is behind many orthodontic and health issues, Stanford researchers say​

The shrinking of the human jaw in modern humans is not due to genetics but is a lifestyle disease that can be proactively addressed, according to Stanford researchers.
BY ADAM HADHAZY
For many of us, orthodontic work – getting fitted with braces, wearing retainers – was just a late-childhood rite of passage. The same went for the pulling of wisdom teeth in early adulthood. Other common conditions, including jaw pain and obstructed sleep apnea – when slack throat muscles interrupt breathing during rest – also just seem like par for the course.


A new study says that parents and caregivers can take steps to promote proper mouth, jawbone and facial musculature development in children to help stave off future health burdens and chronic conditions. (Image credit: Getty Images)
The broader scientific community has largely deemed the underlying abnormality behind these problems as hereditary and untreatable, and opted to deal with symptoms through medical devices and after-the-fact interventions.
But in a new study, Stanford researchers and colleagues argue that all these issues and more are actually relatively new problems afflicting modern humans and can be traced to a shrinking of our jaws. Moreover, they maintain that this “jaws epidemic” is not primarily genetic in origin, as previously thought, but rather a lifestyle disease. That means the epidemic is largely the result of human practices and akin to obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and some cancers.
The study – published in the journal BioScience – marshals the growing evidence from studies conducted around the world surrounding the jaws epidemic, as well as how to address it proactively. Parents and caregivers can take steps to promote proper mouth, jawbone and facial musculature development in children, the study advises, to help stave off future health burdens and chronic conditions.
“The jaws epidemic is very serious, but the good news is, we can actually do something about it,” said Paul Ehrlich, the Bing Professor of Population Studies, Emeritus, at Stanford and one of the study’s authors.
The new study builds upon a book Ehrlich co-wrote with orthodontist and lead study author Sandra Kahn entitled Jaws: The Story of a Hidden Epidemic, published by Stanford University Press in 2018. Two other Stanford researchers, Robert Sapolsky and Marcus Feldman, have contributed their expertise to the new study. Seng-Mun “Simon” Wong, a general dentist in private practice in Australia, was also a co-author.

Rooted in lifestyle, not genetics​

Anthropologists have long noted the significant differences between the jaws and teeth in modern skulls compared to pre-agricultural, hunter-gatherer humans from thousands of years ago. The differences are stark even compared to humans who lived as recently as a century-and-a-half ago during pre-industrial times. These bygone humans showed little teeth crowding, impaction of their wisdom teeth (a leading reason for their surgical removal nowadays) or malocclusion – the abnormal positioning of the upper and lower teeth when the mouth is closed.
panoramic x-ray of a healthy jaw
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Paul Ehrlich on the problems of the modern jaw

Paul Ehrlich wants you to shut your mouth – for your health. According to Ehrlich’s new book, mouth breathing, among other modern habits, has led to an epidemic of small jaws and many troubling health consequences.

Assuming that genetics are chiefly responsible for the sudden modern rise of these dental maladies does not make sense, said Ehrlich. “There’s not been enough time for evolution over the span of only several generations to have made our jaws shrink,” said Ehrlich. Nor is there any evidence of selection pressures that would have favored smaller jawed-people producing more offspring – and thus perpetuating the trait – than regular-jawed people.
“The evidence of a genetic contribution to the jaws epidemic is not strong,” said Feldman, who is a population geneticist and the Burnet C. and Mildred Finley Wohlford Professor and professor of biology.
Instead, profound physiological changes can occur in human populations over short intervals, Feldman pointed out, purely as a result of environmental factors, such as dietary choices and cultural norms. For instance, since World War II, a switchover from heavy rice consumption to more dairy and protein in childhood has been linked to Japanese men gaining around 5 inches in average adult height.
This goes to show that in many cases, lifestyle choices can have just as powerful if not more of an influence on human traits than underlying genetics. “A genetic contribution to a trait, if there is one, does not necessarily sentence you to a life with that trait,” said Feldman. “In almost all cases, you cannot intervene medically to alter a genetic contribution; it’s not actionable. But what is actionable are the things talked about in this study, as well as Paul and Sandra’s book.”

Contributing factors​

Available evidence points to the jaws epidemic arising as humanity underwent sweeping behavioral changes with the advent of agriculture, sedentism (settling in one place for extended periods) and industrialization. One obvious factor is the softening of diets, especially with the relatively recent invention of processed foods. Also, less chewing is needed nowadays to extract adequate nutrition – our ancestors certainly did not enjoy the sustentative luxury of slurping down protein shakes.
A less obvious, though more significant reason behind the jaws epidemic, Ehrlich and colleagues contend, has been the rise of what they describe as bad oral posture. Our bones grow, develop and change shape under the influences of gentle but persistent pressures, multiple studies have shown. The proper development of the jaw and its associated soft tissues is guided by oral posture – the positioning of the jaws and the tongue during times when children are not eating or speaking. This positioning is especially important overnight during long sleep stretches, when swallowing maintains the correct, gentle pressures. With both children and adults now sleeping on forgiving mattresses and pillows, instead of the firm ground as their ancestors did, mouths are likelier to fall open, disrupting positioning and swallowing.
To promote the proper development of the jaw, the answer is not to start sleeping on rocks. Rather, basic practices such as having children chew sugar-free gum, as well as giving babies less mushy foods as they transition to solid foods, can help, the researchers say. Kahn and Wong also practice what they call forwardontics, which includes exercises such as proper breathing and swallowing patterns to guide jaw growth in children as young as 2 versus waiting until children are older and require more severe interventions. To raise awareness of the jaws epidemic and how to better address it, Ehrlich and his co-authors have been giving lectures to conventions of orthodontists and seen some positive momentum. “There’s no question that some clinical practices are moving in this direction,” said Ehrlich, “but we have a lot more work to do.”

Better living, starting from the jaw​

Benefits are not just limited to straighter teeth, roomier jaws and stronger oral muscles. Cutting down on sleep deprivation from sleep apnea is another gain, which has myriad knock-on benefits. Sleep deprivation increases stress, which is associated with greater risks of heart disease, high blood pressure, depression, cancer and Alzheimer’s disease in adult populations, and with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children.
“The maladaptive ‘jaws’ profile can disrupt our stress response and ultimately bring about greater stress and chronic activation of the body’s stress response,” said Sapolsky, the John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor and a professor of biology, of neurology and neurological sciences and of neurosurgery, whose research focuses on stress.
Ehrlich hopes that increased attention and research geared toward the jaws epidemic can turn the tide.
“We’re going to continue learning the causes of the jaws epidemic and continue getting the word out on how this is a highly treatable condition early on in life,” said Ehrlich. “Parents and caregivers, in collaboration with dentists and orthodontists, can all help children to avoid some serious health problems later on in their lives.”

@Handsome Truecel
Based Stanford Mogger

Stanford always delivers and is at the forefront of every innovation

I feel inferior to every Stanford student out there
 
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Based Stanford Mogger

Stanford always delivers and is at the forefront of every innovation

I feel inferior to every Stanford student out there
u are a mogger
 
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Mike Mew, doing a Victory dance

200.gif
 
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takes them long enough :pepefrown: fucking retards
 
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I don't worship John and Mike Mew, because they give false hope to adult who try mewing... but they were very ahead of their times in terms of recognizing the reason for maxilla/mandible recession.
 
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I don't worship John and Mike Mew, because they give false hope to adult who try mewing... but they were very ahead of their times in terms of recognizing the reason for maxilla/mandible recession.
no they weren't. this has been known for hundreds of years (thousands among native americans). but nobody cares. everybody is subhuman and nobody cares. in fact the establishment is perfectly happy slandering anything that goes against their profits
_101036874_elliot_rodger_shutterstock.jpg
 
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I don't worship John and Mike Mew, because they give false hope to adult who try mewing... but they were very ahead of their times in terms of recognizing the reason for maxilla/mandible recession.

They aren't really at all. It only seems that way because that kind of research has been largely ignored for almost 100 years, and this stuff was known anecdotally long before that. Weston Price influenced a huge number of doctors and anthropologists but his findings were not conducive to selling drugs or procedures so it has been replaced by a more corporate-friendly view of medicine as treating random genetic afflictions. The Mews are just a throwback to that old research before it was buried by modern scientism.

They will continue shilling soy burgers, vegan diets, "vaccines" and all sorts of other harmful but profitable modern fads, while pretending that the detrimental health effects are just genetic and only treatable with expensive drugs and procedures.
 
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@LooksOverAll and other orthotrpics deniers on suicide watch. :lul:
 
@LooksOverAll and other orthotrpics deniers on suicide watch. :lul:
Not this shit again. It's literally simple natural/sexual selection. There's 0 actual evidence in this entire article of environment causing it that we haven't heard already. You're retarded if you think a press release means anything. The fact that they're plugging their book 5 times every paragraph should be enough to know their true motivation.
 
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Not this shit again. It's literally simple natural/sexual selection. There's 0 actual evidence in this entire article of environment causing it. You're retarded if you think a press release means anything. The fact that they're plugging their book 5 times every paragraph should be enough to know their true motivation.
Grrrrrr.. my LooksOverAll post for the day , I cum and happy now 🤤
 
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Most still belive its genetic and this one studie
 
It's literally simple natural/sexual selection.
Yes because natural selection would 100% favor a trait that make us unable to breathe. And girls are known to find small jaws attractive. :lul:

It's over in 2022 for primitivecels whose jaws aren't recessed all the way inside their necks.
 
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Yes because natural selection would 100% favor a trait that make us unable to breathe. :lul:

It's over in 2022 if you have a jaw that isn't recessed all the way inside your neck.
Not natural selection, but the lack of it.
 
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Not natural selection, but the lack of it.
Oh now I get your point. I thought it was the usual "humans don't need big jaws anymore therefore sexual selection favors small jaws" argument, which of course doesn't match with reality.

If that was the case then Saint Birdcel would be top male model instead of Sean O'Pry.
 
Cope. Chin and jaw width is genetic
 
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If so , then we need to look at ethnic population and cultures , where they eat mostly hard food and work from little age (this forces you to breathe with nose) and compare their faciocranial stats with ours
 
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Cope. Chin and jaw width is genetic
Jaw width and bizygomatic width most likely , since for e.g here on Germany around 50-60% of people are dolichocephalic with lower bigonial and bizygomatic but with long chin and for e.g mongoloids have big bigonial and bizygomatic but short chins and face
 
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If so , then we need to look at ethnic population and cultures , where they eat mostly hard food and work from little age (this forces you to breathe with nose) and compare their faciocranial stats with ours
Literally the most low IQ statement I've ever heard. Forward growth is a climate-adapted trait. Of course ethnic populations are going to be forward grown.
 
Literally the most low IQ statement I've ever heard. Forward growth is a climate-adapted trait. Of course ethnic populations are going to be forward grown.
Yeah ? Then I also can say "literally the most low IQ statement I've ever heard" because it's your assumption and second , by your logic Siberian or Canadian natives must be recessed while bantu niggers the most forward grown humans on earth , but the reality shows that this isn't the case
 
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Yeah ? Then I also can say "literally the most low IQ statement I've ever heard" because it's your assumption and second , by your logic Siberian or Canadian natives must be recessed while bantu niggers the most forward grown humans on earth , but the reality shows that this isn't the case
It is the case. Siberian people are incredibly flat faced while Africans have convex faces.
 
It is the case. Siberian people are incredibly flat faced while Africans have convex faces.
Africans have prognathism , but there's also Capoid (Bushmen) population that doesn't have this prognathism while still living in Africa
 
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Africans have prognathism , but there's also Capoid (Bushmen) population that doesn't have this prognathism while still living in Africa
Not really. They have forward growth and prognathism for maximum airway. Obviously as people evolve throughout different areas, the way they look will change.
 
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Not really. They have forward growth and prognathism for maximum airway. Obviously as people evolve throughout different areas, the way they look will change.
Be honest , does it make them look good ? I believe , that orthognathic faces of caucasoid skulls are much more aesthetically pleasant
 
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Literally cope. Mandible length is completely genetic. I also have a very wide pallet and perfect teeth and I barely used my jaw growing up. It’s genetic. There’s a reason full blacks not African Americans all have prognatism and Asians are flat faced. Jfl if you think Sean o pry was chewing more than the average kid growing up
 
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no they weren't. this has been known for hundreds of years (thousands among native americans). but nobody cares. everybody is subhuman and nobody cares. in fact the establishment is perfectly happy slandering anything that goes against their profits
_101036874_elliot_rodger_shutterstock.jpg
They were. Mews didn't "invent it" but it was popularised in modern times by them.
 
Be honest , does it make them look good ? I believe , that orthognathic faces of caucasoid skulls are much more aesthetically pleasant
Ideal is in between.
 
Maybe one day will understand all the bullshit making incels rope
 
Literally cope. Mandible length is completely genetic. I also have a very wide pallet and perfect teeth and I barely used my jaw growing up. It’s genetic. There’s a reason full blacks not African Americans all have prognatism and Asians are flat faced. Jfl if you think Sean o pry was chewing more than the average kid growing up
Incorrect. All Africans breathe through their nose from a young age and all Asian mouth breathe with incorrect tongue posture :feelsuhh:.
 
takes them long enough :pepefrown: fucking retards
Mike mew is wrong

stanford (mainstream) are half wrong and 120 years late

Genetics and environment is the cause.

cba going through this shit again. I don’t get paid ( $0 )as well as stanford jews to be smarter than them
:feelsuhh::feelsuhh::feelsuhh::feelsuhh::feelsuhh::feelsuhh::feelsuhh::feelsuhh: I hate you all
 
Literally cope. Mandible length is completely genetic. I also have a very wide pallet and perfect teeth and I barely used my jaw growing up. It’s genetic. There’s a reason full blacks not African Americans all have prognatism and Asians are flat faced. Jfl if you think Sean o pry was chewing more than the average kid growing up
How do you remember that you barely used it . I would arguee that mandible length is dependent on oral posture and environment but bigonial (jaw width) and bizygomatic (face width) is more or less genetic.
 
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How do you remember that you barely used it . I would arguee that mandible length is dependent on oral posture and environment but bigonial (jaw width) and bizygomatic (face width) is more or less genetic.
The toughest thing I ate was already soft chicken that my mom would cut up into many very small pieces so I wouldn’t choke cause she is irrationally afraid of everything. Enforced monogamy caused this. Seriously the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. Unusual Positioning and Richard Ramirez is mostly proof that environment is cope
 
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The toughest thing I ate was already soft chicken that my mom would cut up into many very small pieces so I wouldn’t choke cause she is irrationally afraid of everything. Enforced monogamy caused this. Seriously the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. Unusual Positioning and Richard Ramirez is mostly proof that environment is cope
I feel like this is ropefuel for many people. To acknowledge that you are genetically inferior just because you were unlucky to be born with such genes
 
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I feel like this is ropefuel for many people. To acknowledge that you are genetically inferior just because you were unlucky to be born with such genes
Well yeah it’s ropefuel because of two things: you are ugly and it was caused by your incel genes that should’ve been filtered; and two, you will either be childless or pass on incel genes. You won’t be able to do anything because environment is cope. You will deprive your children of amazing experiences as a young naive teenager.
 
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JSE mogs
 
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It’s proly what Westin price said. K2 d3 and calcium and phosphorus.

and less likely due to hardness of diet.

price found some cultures who subsisted on mostly diary and had perfect dental health and occlusion.
 
Finally they are starting to acknowledge orthotropics. 10 years ago all dentists/orthodonists would have laughed in your face if you told them about mouth breathing and mewing. It is insane that almost all of them are this brainwashed or they simply don't care about their patients. I think it will still take quite some time until some of the traditional methods are discarded.
 
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Stanford always delivers and is at the forefront of every innovation

I feel inferior to every Stanford student out there
:soy::soy::soy:
 
Literally cope. Mandible length is completely genetic. I also have a very wide pallet and perfect teeth and I barely used my jaw growing up. It’s genetic. There’s a reason full blacks not African Americans all have prognatism and Asians are flat faced. Jfl if you think Sean o pry was chewing more than the average kid growing up
:feelsuhh:
 
Monistic approaches to such phenomena are always an overreduction of complexity. Fact of the matter is, it's probably a combination of several factors and the individual case can't precisely be traced down to a single cause. My best guess is that it's:

- Genetics (Strong jaws are less strongly selected, more recessed people get to reproduce and more recessed kids survive)
- Environmental factors (mostly chemicals and processed, soft food)
- More awareness: Recessed people or malocclusions simply weren't registered ever so often a few decades ago
- Epigenetic degeneration due to poor lifestyle choices by parents, grand parents
 
JULY 21, 2020

A hidden epidemic of shrinking jaws is behind many orthodontic and health issues, Stanford researchers say​

The shrinking of the human jaw in modern humans is not due to genetics but is a lifestyle disease that can be proactively addressed, according to Stanford researchers.
BY ADAM HADHAZY
For many of us, orthodontic work – getting fitted with braces, wearing retainers – was just a late-childhood rite of passage. The same went for the pulling of wisdom teeth in early adulthood. Other common conditions, including jaw pain and obstructed sleep apnea – when slack throat muscles interrupt breathing during rest – also just seem like par for the course.


A new study says that parents and caregivers can take steps to promote proper mouth, jawbone and facial musculature development in children to help stave off future health burdens and chronic conditions. (Image credit: Getty Images)
The broader scientific community has largely deemed the underlying abnormality behind these problems as hereditary and untreatable, and opted to deal with symptoms through medical devices and after-the-fact interventions.
But in a new study, Stanford researchers and colleagues argue that all these issues and more are actually relatively new problems afflicting modern humans and can be traced to a shrinking of our jaws. Moreover, they maintain that this “jaws epidemic” is not primarily genetic in origin, as previously thought, but rather a lifestyle disease. That means the epidemic is largely the result of human practices and akin to obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and some cancers.
The study – published in the journal BioScience – marshals the growing evidence from studies conducted around the world surrounding the jaws epidemic, as well as how to address it proactively. Parents and caregivers can take steps to promote proper mouth, jawbone and facial musculature development in children, the study advises, to help stave off future health burdens and chronic conditions.
“The jaws epidemic is very serious, but the good news is, we can actually do something about it,” said Paul Ehrlich, the Bing Professor of Population Studies, Emeritus, at Stanford and one of the study’s authors.
The new study builds upon a book Ehrlich co-wrote with orthodontist and lead study author Sandra Kahn entitled Jaws: The Story of a Hidden Epidemic, published by Stanford University Press in 2018. Two other Stanford researchers, Robert Sapolsky and Marcus Feldman, have contributed their expertise to the new study. Seng-Mun “Simon” Wong, a general dentist in private practice in Australia, was also a co-author.

Rooted in lifestyle, not genetics​

Anthropologists have long noted the significant differences between the jaws and teeth in modern skulls compared to pre-agricultural, hunter-gatherer humans from thousands of years ago. The differences are stark even compared to humans who lived as recently as a century-and-a-half ago during pre-industrial times. These bygone humans showed little teeth crowding, impaction of their wisdom teeth (a leading reason for their surgical removal nowadays) or malocclusion – the abnormal positioning of the upper and lower teeth when the mouth is closed.
panoramic x-ray of a healthy jaw
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Paul Ehrlich on the problems of the modern jaw

Paul Ehrlich wants you to shut your mouth – for your health. According to Ehrlich’s new book, mouth breathing, among other modern habits, has led to an epidemic of small jaws and many troubling health consequences.

Assuming that genetics are chiefly responsible for the sudden modern rise of these dental maladies does not make sense, said Ehrlich. “There’s not been enough time for evolution over the span of only several generations to have made our jaws shrink,” said Ehrlich. Nor is there any evidence of selection pressures that would have favored smaller jawed-people producing more offspring – and thus perpetuating the trait – than regular-jawed people.
“The evidence of a genetic contribution to the jaws epidemic is not strong,” said Feldman, who is a population geneticist and the Burnet C. and Mildred Finley Wohlford Professor and professor of biology.
Instead, profound physiological changes can occur in human populations over short intervals, Feldman pointed out, purely as a result of environmental factors, such as dietary choices and cultural norms. For instance, since World War II, a switchover from heavy rice consumption to more dairy and protein in childhood has been linked to Japanese men gaining around 5 inches in average adult height.
This goes to show that in many cases, lifestyle choices can have just as powerful if not more of an influence on human traits than underlying genetics. “A genetic contribution to a trait, if there is one, does not necessarily sentence you to a life with that trait,” said Feldman. “In almost all cases, you cannot intervene medically to alter a genetic contribution; it’s not actionable. But what is actionable are the things talked about in this study, as well as Paul and Sandra’s book.”

Contributing factors​

Available evidence points to the jaws epidemic arising as humanity underwent sweeping behavioral changes with the advent of agriculture, sedentism (settling in one place for extended periods) and industrialization. One obvious factor is the softening of diets, especially with the relatively recent invention of processed foods. Also, less chewing is needed nowadays to extract adequate nutrition – our ancestors certainly did not enjoy the sustentative luxury of slurping down protein shakes.
A less obvious, though more significant reason behind the jaws epidemic, Ehrlich and colleagues contend, has been the rise of what they describe as bad oral posture. Our bones grow, develop and change shape under the influences of gentle but persistent pressures, multiple studies have shown. The proper development of the jaw and its associated soft tissues is guided by oral posture – the positioning of the jaws and the tongue during times when children are not eating or speaking. This positioning is especially important overnight during long sleep stretches, when swallowing maintains the correct, gentle pressures. With both children and adults now sleeping on forgiving mattresses and pillows, instead of the firm ground as their ancestors did, mouths are likelier to fall open, disrupting positioning and swallowing.
To promote the proper development of the jaw, the answer is not to start sleeping on rocks. Rather, basic practices such as having children chew sugar-free gum, as well as giving babies less mushy foods as they transition to solid foods, can help, the researchers say. Kahn and Wong also practice what they call forwardontics, which includes exercises such as proper breathing and swallowing patterns to guide jaw growth in children as young as 2 versus waiting until children are older and require more severe interventions. To raise awareness of the jaws epidemic and how to better address it, Ehrlich and his co-authors have been giving lectures to conventions of orthodontists and seen some positive momentum. “There’s no question that some clinical practices are moving in this direction,” said Ehrlich, “but we have a lot more work to do.”

Better living, starting from the jaw​

Benefits are not just limited to straighter teeth, roomier jaws and stronger oral muscles. Cutting down on sleep deprivation from sleep apnea is another gain, which has myriad knock-on benefits. Sleep deprivation increases stress, which is associated with greater risks of heart disease, high blood pressure, depression, cancer and Alzheimer’s disease in adult populations, and with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children.
“The maladaptive ‘jaws’ profile can disrupt our stress response and ultimately bring about greater stress and chronic activation of the body’s stress response,” said Sapolsky, the John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor and a professor of biology, of neurology and neurological sciences and of neurosurgery, whose research focuses on stress.
Ehrlich hopes that increased attention and research geared toward the jaws epidemic can turn the tide.
“We’re going to continue learning the causes of the jaws epidemic and continue getting the word out on how this is a highly treatable condition early on in life,” said Ehrlich. “Parents and caregivers, in collaboration with dentists and orthodontists, can all help children to avoid some serious health problems later on in their lives.”

@Handsome Truecel
Good thread
 
  • +1
Reactions: Birdcell
I had to read this bullshit just to find out that they have 0 evidence, cool story bro
 

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