(11-09-2017, 07:56 AM)TBMx Wrote: I am no dentist nor any kind of medical professional.
However my teeth grow out of the jawbone - sorrounded and supported by the gum! - no gum no stable teeth - the actual bone does very little in holding the teeth in place (except for maybe down- or upwards). (otherwise getting teeth pulled out would be kind of ... well .. you know all the bleeding and stuff? my bones do not bleed - my gums however does that^^)
Somehow the evolution came to the conclusion that relatively stable teeth are better than actually fully integrate them into the bonestructures. (you can actually see the sorrounding gums on any modell about teeth - even in the x-rays - or better an MRT - but who would do that?)
I was not talking about mouth breathing (although that is a shortcut to really bad mouth problems - and I know what I'm speaking about as I am a mouth-breather) - I was talking about leaks through the mouth.
I find it funny that you state that you are not a dentist or any kind of medical professional, and then you give random false information that come from nowhere as if they were facts.
Well, I am a dentist and here are the facts...
Bone supports teeth.
"sorrounded and supported by the gum! " no
"no gum no stable teeth" Well, not exactly.... as bone resorbs, gums follow bone and also often resorb. When you can see gum recessions, it's because there is bone loss under it, you just don't usually see your jaw bone so you only notice gum, and figure out that you "loose gums until you loose teeth"....
" the actual bone does very little in holding the teeth in place (except for maybe down- or upwards)." Well sorry it does most of it.
"(otherwise getting teeth pulled out would be kind of ... well .. you know all the bleeding and stuff?" No, I don't get what you mean. (But I have pulled over 5000 teeth so I kind of have a clue what it's like....) And I have drilled and cut tons of jaw bones and gums and everything.
"my bones do not bleed - my gums however does that^^)" Then you are a zombie, because on human beings, bone bleeds.
"Somehow the evolution came to the conclusion that relatively stable teeth are better than actually fully integrate them into the bonestructures. (you can actually see the sorrounding gums on any modell about teeth - even in the x-rays - or better an MRT - but who would do that?)" That one is really hard for me to understand. Do you mean that teeth roots are surrounded by a periodontal ligament, that somewhat anchors the root to the bone? Yes, it's the case. (but it's not "gums", it's a ligament). And while it actually kind of holds the tooth in place against upward forces, bone actually does most of the support anyway. Teeth cannot be fully integrated into bone (or they would be bone). They "grow" and "erupt" in bone. They can't be bone, or be fused to bone....
Oh well. I can argue about teeth all day (and I do every day...). Let's keep it cpap I guess.