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Jaws shrink with age and impact on teeth

7th Nov 2011

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The size of our jaws decreases with age. That's according to a new study that followed a cohort of dentists throughout their adult lives.

The study started in 1949 and was carried out by from the Faculty of Dentistry at Malmö University in Sweden.

Plaster moulds were made of the jaws of dental students, who were then in their twenties.

Ten years' later the procedure was repeated, and in 1989, 40 years after the first moulds, a final round was performed.

On that occasion, the researchers were in touch with 18 of the original 30 participants.

Lars Bondemark, professor of orthodontics, who analyzed the material together with his colleague Maria Nilner, professor of clinical bite physiology at the College of Dentistry, Malmö University, said: 'We found that, over these 40 years, there was less and less room for teeth in the jaw.'

This crowdedness comes from shrinkage of the jaw, primarily the lower jaw, both in length and width. While this is only a matter of a few millimeters, but it is enough to crowd the front teeth.

He added: 'We can also eliminate wisdom teeth as the cause, because even people who have no wisdom teeth have crowded front teeth.'

How much the jaw shrinks is individual, but for some patients the changes are sufficiently great for them to perceive that something is happening to their bite.

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'In that case it's good to know that this is normal,' says Lars Bondemark, who maintains that dentists need to take into consideration the continuous shrinking of the jaws when they plan to perform major bite constructions on their patients.

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