Why do we have crooked teeth when our ancestors didn’t? - G. Richard Scott
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- Опубликовано: 1 май 2023
- Explore the prevailing scientific theory of why crooked teeth and impacted wisdom teeth are recent developments in human evolution.
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According to the fossil record, ancient humans usually had straight teeth, complete with wisdom teeth. In fact, the dental dilemmas that fuel the demand for braces and wisdom teeth extractions today appear to be recent developments. So, what happened? While it’s nearly impossible to know for sure, scientists have a hypothesis. G. Richard Scott shares the prevailing theory on crooked teeth.
Lesson by G. Richard Scott, directed by Igor Coric, Artrake Studio.
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Informal poll about wisdom teeth: 👍 this comment if you still have them. Reply ⬇ if you had them taken out. Also, many thanks to those of you who helped us produce this video by supporting us on Patreon 🧡 bit.ly/3AOj63U
⬇👍 :)
I naturally only have 3 and one got taken out
Had them taken out
Don't have them yet😎
Had mine removed in my late 20s
Can you do another video on how vision problems came up? I find it hard to believe that so many modern humans need glasses and contacts due to poor eyesight when our ancestors were hunter/gatherers who would have heavily relied on perfect vision.
Vox has a good video on why vision problems are so common now
Thats pretty obvious? We stare at screens 99% of the time 🤷♂️.
@@anze2474 it's not about the screens, but about reading.
@@anze2474 Screens are too recent, less than 40 years.
"Heavily relied of perfect vision," and that's exactly it. My optometrist did a study on this, and the greatest jumps in the number of people with glases are after wars. He theorizes that the reason people need glasses today, is because all the people with perfect vision *were* the hunters, and the warriors, so they died more often, leaving people with better vision behind to have a better chance at survival. This is also why we don't see as many animals with vision problems, because there is no process for protecting them or selectively sending out to be the ones hunting and fighting.
cries in 2 years of braces
Just removed mine which ive worn for 4 years😂😂
Amateurs.
7 years of braces
It's almost 2 years for me too!
Felt.
I had for almost 5
Interestingly, this is the opposite of what happened with the giant panda bear. Pandas were meat eaters but started eating bamboo due to lack of prey. The panda jaw became much larger along with developing huge jaw muscles.
Now that makes me feel bad for Pandas.. but also impressed because other animals would just die when they're lack of prey
Bamboo is raw and tough to eat though so it still makes sense that it would develop their jaws. That’s an interesting fact, I didn’t know they used to be carnivores!
@F4PTR So pandas started eating bamboo because people started eating cooked food? Really? I don't see your logic in this.
@@LucidDreamer54321 lol wrong chat
@F4PTR Try to get off the drugs.
I have a pretty small lower jaw & my teeth are really big. Had extremely crooked teeth with a bad overbite & had to get my wisdom teeth removed. Wore braces for 3 years in my teens & now I’m almost 30 & my lower teeth have shifted to become crooked again. This makes so much sense & is very insightful!
Girl! Same!!! Except I had to wear braces for 5 years from 12-17. It was absolutely horrible! Two teeth have shifted, unfortunately in the front! I will be not doing braces again or even Invisalign or any of those because they told me you have to wear a retainer every night for the rest of your life or else they shift again! I’m just going to get the two of them shaved down and get crowns.
@@erikstone2321 you should have worn retainers for the rest of your life. That's the whole thing with braces. Otherwise they will slowly go back to it's original place. Your teeth are still moving. You should get a retainer
My father had perfectly straight teeth and his wisdom teeth. My mother had normal sized teeth but a much smaller jaw so she ended up with very crooked teeth and wisdom tooth extractions. I ended up with crooked teeth and braces , but all my teeth came in, including my wisdom teeth, because I had an old-school dentist who didn’t believe in pulling teeth unless it was necessary. But it is true, once you get into your middle age, your teeth to start to shift back. That’s why so many adults now are wearing Invisalign in their 50s. On the flipside, for a lot of us it’s just too much of a pain to go back to the whole braces thing.
You have to keep wearing your retainers at night otherwise your teeth go back to their old shape. I have this issue too
i’m in the opposite situation: big jaw and my teeth are small. I have 5 (5!) wisdom teeth but can probably keep them all a without too many complications because of how much space there is in my mouth lol. I can thank our early ancestors for the cool genes getting passed on to me I guess
I always wondered why the skulls that can be seen in the Paris catacombs all seemed to have perfect teeth. I asked a dentist who said that our current diet is bad for our teeth. But I think he was referring more to sugar that to hardness and softness.
They seem to have perfect teeth but have you inspected each one?
Chewing hard food is certainly not ideal for our teeth as they cause more abrasion and wears down our teeth
Sugar cause other problem to teeth.
They also died quite young.
@@OliverJazzz That's actually not the case. The low life expectancy for people in the middle ages is their expectancy at birth. Most people died long before adulthood. But if they made it to adulthood, they usually lived well into their sixties or seventies. You can directly see that in artworks and in writings of that time.
Two canine extractions
Two years of braces
One year of retainer
Four impacted wisdom teeth
I'm just starting to think my jaw was never right
same
food for thought, huh?
Evolution takes a long time. Maybe your great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandkids will have perfect teeth!
@@ZayulRasco probably not. In the modern world there isn't a significant reproductive fitness benefits to having perfect teeth so it will probably not change much or change randomly
Are you sure it’s your canine not your premolars? Canines extractions are almost contraindicated in orthodontics treatments, unless under special circumstances? Im a dentist practicing ortho. We never extract canine just like that, they are the pillars of your dental arches.
This video makes so much sense. I had a eureka moment after watching it. I think that eating CARROTS🥕during childhood could be effective at creating straight teeth.
My parents both had crooked teeth and bad bites during adolescents and required braces to get straight teeth. Meanwhile me and 4/5 of my siblings developed naturally straight teeth. One sibling developed crooked teeth with a severe overbite and he had to have braces. We all ate the same diet except the sibling that developed bad teeth. One food that he never ate was raw carrots which the rest of us had as a daily snack.
Interesting! Thank you for sharing!
Thanks to bugs bunny I loved eating carrots the way he do in my childhood and now u mentioned it I guess it's the reason I didnt need braces
I ate a lot of carrots and apples and still had crooked teeth
@@fatimaal-junaid2187 oh my gosh me too
Yep, and eating harder and healthier food is also related to "mewing," which is when the tongue touches and supports the roof of the mouth. This widens the jaws for straighter teeth.
Two dentist experts had wrote a book called JAWS. Definitely goes more in depth about this and explains everything and how to fix it with diet etc. definitely worth the read.
Single moms be like
Dr. Weston Price was a dentist who studied the jaws and diets of indigenous populations around the world. He found that Indigenous people that grew up eating their natural diet had almost always perfect dental arches, jaw width, straight teeth and no tooth decay. He found that changes in the diet were able to drastically descrease this kind of dental health within even 1 generation ( the kids of these people). This means the kids started eating a western diet (flour, sugar, canned, processed, etc) and developed the same problems, we nowadays have. NOW: while there may be a relation between chewing hard foods and dental health, he found the key in havin perfect development to be nutrient density, which is present in the indigenous diet and absent in the western diet.
Yep! Traditional, non-processed foods are best. This proprioception aids jaw expansion too for full development.
Indigenous to where?
You understand 'westerners' are indegenous people's too right?
@Mitchell Couchman were westerners not hunter gatherers?
The wording kinda goes against what you say
Weston Price is literally pseudo-science. He didn't use any method for his observations and ended up with absurd conclusions. I mean, come on... Price even said that oral hygiene is not important for dental health! 🤦♂
@@Th3_Gael troll? 😂
You ain’t changing anyones mind😂
What a hack
We know the truth sucka!
Tldr; When we started eating cooked foods which were softer instead of raw food, the jaw shrank leading to crowding teeth which makes teeth crooked....its also why most people need wisdom tooth removal
Thank you
Actually, even if you ear raw food now, your jaw size has already been predetermined genetically years ago from your ancestors, however you could maximise your growth by chewing harder food tho, it will not magically grow your jaw. You could still end up with dental crowding even with chewing harder food, since you’re born with a smaller sized jaw gene.
Thanks Petah griffin
Using "shrank" in past tense is wrong here though. This is not a change that happened some time in the past. This is an environmental change, not a genetic one, as they said in the video (recall the monkey experiment).
I chewed soft foods as a kid (eggs, pasta, rice, bread, some meat) and I never needed braces, my teeth are 99% straight with a slight imperfection to the lower front. The only explanation I can give you is that I never liked sugar that much so I never really had it often. No sodas, no sweets. So perhaps that is the culprit, excess sugar. I can't think of any other variable. My diet was never anything spectacular except for the fact I don't do sugar. I also have had no issues with any wisdom teeth.
This is indeed a well known idea! I also experienced it first hand because I hated chewing and only ate soft baby food, requiring braces a bit. My sister who was more favorable to chewable foods has straight teeth. Also, it seems like the States has more problem with braces due to how their baby foods are processed and presented (like apple sauce). In Korea, not as many kids need braces because they are trained to chew some stuff, even like rice porridge, as a baby.
Thats interesting because my sisters were raised more american and they both needed braces for years…. I was raised more korean and my teeth ended up pretty straight too!
@@Shtuhtefupwell, they're not pulling these facts from thin air!
Just had my wisdom teeth removed 3 weeks ago and have been wearing braces for over 2 years. I shedded tears watching this video 🥲
It should also be added that mouth breathing since adolescence can influence dental formation. Teeth alignment is influenced by how usual the jaw is closed.
Precisely. When your mouth is closed your tongue tends to rest on the roof of your mouth and thus apply force that affects how your maxilla develops. Mandible follows after maxilla.
I suffer from a lot of allergies and spend majority of the year nose very congested. Most likely due to this my jaws ended up underdeveloped. My brother was even worse and also had nasal polyps. Very recessed too.
and now here i am trying to reverse the effects of my mouth breathing 😭
@@gobhissi Take heart! They are finding that jaw exercises can help even in adulthood. :) Good luck and best wishes
@@paigeb1318 yeah, I'm mewing, the only problem is that, i adopted lopsided (one sided chewing) since childhood, so now one side is weared out more than the other side, so it creates problems in mewing.
mouth breathing is caused by obstruction of respiratory passsages (para nasal sinuses) by deviated septum in particular
Caution: I’ve just learned that having teeth removed for braces probably made my obstructive sleep apnea worse by letting my jaw shrink. Required major surgery to correct (partially). Know the risks before orthodontics!
My orthodontist wanted to extract my maxillar premolars and warned me my treatment would take a lot longer if I didn't have them removed. I flat out refused because I am already missing enough teeth ... I'm glad I didn't have my perfectly healthy premolars taken out !!
You must live in the usa
@@rainstorm_joguy sounds like a quack
Oh wow, that is crazy. Only in America🤦🏽♀️
Had braces that completely changed my bite and jaw and caused me to grit my teeth all the time.
I finally stopped wearing my retainers a few years ago and my mouth is reverting back.
My bite is almost “normal” again (much better than what the orthodontist constructed. The dude was an actual quack)
So yes! Agreed! Please do your research on orthodontics
Especially if you’re a parent forcing an unwilling child to do so for “appearance” reasons.
This makes so much sense for me. I’ve got a small head and mouth so I’ve got a small jaw. I’ve had so much work done to my teeth because I had too many, I’ve had several teeth out because of overcrowding. My wisdom teeth have replaced the rear molars…but I can’t complain about it because I’ve got veneers so that teenage trauma is gone thank the lord!
But now you have to get your veneers replaced every decade?
@@ptaylor7782 if you look after your teeth correctly you shouldn’t have to change them every decade!
Thanks for very informative video! I was thinking of this phenomenon for long time too. The last sentence with pun was spot on!
Our jaws have evolved to be smaller/weaker given the changes in our diet. I remember a program on TV comparing medieval jaws with modern ones, and even in that relatively short time period noticeable changes have occurred.
Slightly related - in the UK urban foxes have become less intelligent and weaker jawed than their cousins that remained in the country areas since scrounging food remains left over by humans doesn't require the biological cost of a smart brain etc. That's been recorded over the last 50 years or so.
Evolution mane!
its all speculation non sense nobody was there to see what happend millions of years ago
How is that evolution? Evolution means more fitting DNA for the new conditions
It's not evolution, our DNA is exactly the same as our large jawed hunter-gatherer ancestors, it's just the diet during the developmental period that leads to a different outcome.
@@MohdHilal The new conditions are not as selective, and nets keep people alive who carry what you see as detrimental gene expressions. Its evolution geared towards a different environment (comfortable living) as opposed to hasher ones where these traits are needed.
I'm one of those people who had straight teeth and wisdom teeth that emerged with no issues apart from a little teething pain. My family didn't believe me because most of them have had issues with their wisdom teeth crowding their mouths, but one day - boom. There they were poking through.
Mine too!! I always have to count my teeth as proof that I have my wisdom teeth 😂
Same thing happened to me after I got my braces removed. Never had a problem and I think I'm the only one in my family that still has their wisdoms
I always have dentists astonished that they never made a dime off me.
You lucky bastards
so did you chew a lot of tough uncooked food growing up?
I have always wondered about this. Thank you
I swear your videos are the best in so many ways
Slowly but surely these ideas will become more mainstream and people will realise how much of an epidemic of recessed jaws, malocclusion, poor facial development and stomatognathic issues we are in
It's really nature doing what it does best, evolving things to oblivion
Absolutely none of this is a secret or new. These beliefs have been around for decades, at least. Evolution isn't always good nor bad. We need teeth to last far longer than the ancient men did.
Epidemic of 1st world aesthetic problems...
Unrelated, but sorta related, the same goes to women giving birth nowadays- it’s much more painful because our pelvis’ have gotten smaller. Just another example I recently learned abt how our bodies adapted in ways that can hurt us
This is the exact reason why aliens like "greys" seem to have very small jaws, they have no need for chewing and probably take pills or drink liquids for nutrition
When I lived in Nigeria straight, large teeth were very common. In fact the most common ‘flaw’ were gaps in teeth. I think Africans have larger jaws. My dad and all of his family have straight teeth no braces and wide smiles. My mother is French. She had braces as a child. All of her family have crooked teeth.
My siblings and I were born and raised in the USA and UK. I’ve got braces and have one impacted molar. My sister had hers removed and braces. My brother needs braces for crowding on his lower arch
Nigerians have better diets with plenty of fruit and natural, local foods. The french have been eating bread and cheese for generations now
I think it has to do with the induction of ever greater mutations in the dna.
I come from Zambia and can also anecdotally confirm this. Teeth use is still extensive in subsaharan Africa, I've seen first world people marvel at a celebrity that could open bottles with her teeth when this is so common that no one would even bat a second eye in Africa; we go as far as peeling sugarcane with our bare teeth. Braces are an very rare occurrence and have definitely seen more people with gaps than braces
The African continent had a population of like 100-140 million in 1900. It wasn’t until the 20th century that western farming and western “aid” in the form of free grain started pouring in, ballooning the population and also starting the process of rising rates of diabetes and obesity and most likely at some point dental issues.
Yes gaps are extremely common among Sub-Saharan people and crowded teeth are common among certain groups of Europeans who eat an American diet.
they were mewing 🤫🧏
Yes.
Great information....I'm a dental assistant and I will definitely use this in patient education 😊
You inform people using information from random youtube videos?
I heard that most of the indigenous people in Australia have straight teeth and experience no problems with their wisdom teeth, which is not just because of their diet but also possibly some bone-related genes they inherited from the Denisovans.
Are you Australian?
Yes. Oh whoops that wasn't directed at me 😔
Well their ancestors diet is what impacted their genes
@@sweetestaphrodite what does being australian have to do with the information being given?
Denisovans lived in Siberia and Eastern Asia.
I started doing Mewing and it helped me widen my upper palate, as well as giving me an attractive jaw.
Thank you for sharing.
Swedish court dentist Henry Beyron studied chewing patterns on Australian aboriginoes in the 70s, and could show that they had ideal chewing patterns with great ability to process food. He linked this to their lifestyle. I've seen the video material, it's very informative stuff.
can you please link the video? i want to watch it
@@masnajunaid4520 It's not on RUclips I saw it at a dental conference. Basically all the people he filmed had great symmetry both in the wear of their teeth, and in their facial muscles. They easily chewed food on both left and right side, had straight arches of teeth, and proportional jaws that accomodated third molars.
Perfect teeth=natural human teeth. Diet we ate as hunter gathererers (heavy amounts of meat)= natural human diet. Modern diet=slave diet
Ok
How does one determine an ideal chewing pattern? Does it just mean no malocclusions?
Actually Dr Weston Price a dentist from the 40s spent his life studying groups around our world who at that time still had actually perfect teeth and then when they started changing certain things in their diet and such, it completely changed within a generation. The work is very fascinating and very viable compared to this hypothesis.
Came here to see if this had anything to do with Weston A Price's research
@@kitcat9447 same here
Vilhjalmur Stefansson, an arctic explorer, found the same when he saw the eskimos, saying they had the best teeth he’d ever seen. He also began promoting an all meat diet.
And the few tribes that are left around the world, that still eat their traditional diet, still have straight teeth. Diet seems to have more to do with it than chewing of food.
Weston Price is literally pseudo-science. He didn't use any method for his observations and ended up with absurd conclusions. I mean, come on... Price even said that oral hygiene is not important for dental health! 🤦♂
Very informative, thank you.
I've read that the dietary change from paleolithic to agriculture ten thousand years ago coincided with changes in human bone structure. People on average became shorter and bone density decreased brought on by a lack of nutrition in plant foods/grains compared to animal nutrients. Weston A. Price travelled the world investigating teeth of various tribes including the Inuit. He was amazed that people groups who did not eat processed foods all had amazing health and good teeth.
I am of mixed race and was told by one dentist once that the problem in my mouth (really buck tooth) is I had Native American teeth in and English jaw...meaning my teeth were big strong and very strongly rooted, but my jaw is small, and V shaped. My siblings didn't get the English jaw, look very different, and have had very little issues with their teeth.
English jaws arent small at all, English people were and still are larger on average than Native Americans.
@@fishofgold6553 Just telling you what I was told.
@@justanotherguyful Not all of them.
@@justanotherguyful All Native Americans are NOT the same just like all Europeans are NOT the same.
@@fishofgold6553 I do believe it's true. I was told something similar. I have big square teeth in a small jaw.
My orthodontist warned me not to rest my head on my hands because the jaw is still pliable when its growing. This can cause teeth to move around. It makes sense that we only see crowding since industrialisation. A lot more kids are going through school now and get board sitting at desks.
Interesting point of view! Yes, we are not adapted to sitting in school 7 hours a day.
School really sucks for human development lol. This and eyesight issues. Schools needed reforming
They should just return the board they get then.
lol
@@krembryle7903 Schools should teach children how to sit correctly. They usually do, but this information is said once, at the beginning of first year, and never repeated, so it flies out of the window. Repetition is mother of learning.
We aren't made to sit, but we have breaks and we have Sport class and other outdoor activities.
Besides, if we need to sit in front of a PC to play a game, we forget about the fact that we are not made to sit for hours...
Thanks for this video, Mark! My daughter just moved from the US to New Zealand, and everyone asks her if the toilets flush the opposite direction. She's tried to tell them there's really no discernable direction, but now we can show them this video.
I was on submarines in the US Navy. Before we could go to sea the first time, we all had to have their wisdom teeth removed. This was to prevent having to pull off of patrol to evacuate sailors with infected wisdom teeth. It’s so much of a problem that they preemptively remove everyone’s wisdom teeth.
Dont forget allergies, mouth breathing led to my crooked (now straight) teeth 😢
So how can you make it staight?
@@araitol3935 nose breathing and mewing (proper tongue posture)
Omg twins
Samesies, and it took me 10 consecutive years of dental treatment plus two more to recorrect my alignment after I removed my wisdom teeth
Fascinating! Thanks!
This was legit a question i wanted to know. Even talked to my fiancé about it 😊so happy to have stumbled onto this!!!
My dentist (who is also my uncle) always says that I have perfect teeth. He also said that children who still have their baby teeth should chew on something hard, but chewable. It will help stimulate the growth of a healthy permanent teeth. When I was a child, i used to bite the head/arm/gun/whole body off a lot of those little plastic soldier toys and in my country we eat sugar canes and a really thick and hard cookie. I really had an urge to bite those things and it felt soooo good when I did. That might explain why I have good teeth, even better than my brother, who didnt eat those things nearly as much.
The funny thing is, now in my 29, i dont have that urge to bite.
Interesting! In my country, we chew chicken and beef bones into powder when eating. We would do that as kids and maybe that explains why we all in my family had straight, hard, and perfect teeth!😮 never thou about it
I think thats called pica
@@thebard5019 elaborate
@@HeliusRa Specifically relating to the toy soldier thing. I am probaby wrong but my understanding is as follows:
Pica is the desire to eat things that are not food. it is common in children and pregnant people. My research indicates pica includes swallowing those things though, so i think i was wrong to call chewing on a toy soldier pica
You think eating toys gave you strong teeth? Sweetie please do not ever repeat this in person out loud 😂
4:55 yall are wrong for this. The sounds make me so uncomfortable 💀
My next door neighbor was a dentist, while I was growing up he’d instruct my parents how to care for my teeth especially for cavity and braces prevention. I’m in highschool and I haven’t had and hopefully won’t ever need braces. Both my parents have dental history so it’s not like it’s a genetic thing lol
Amazing. Nice stuff.
All four of my wisdom teeth came in, the top two came in fine, the bottom two where impacted. One came in FULLY SIDEWAYS, never emerged from the gum, and pressed against the molar next to it in such a way it developed a huge cavity. I had to get all five of those teeth removed, and it caused me massive jaw pain because I already have an overbite.
I’ve read that the invention of eating utensils contributed to teeth crookedness as well. Not cutting food into pieces meant teeth were still used to pull and rip food apart
Most people's food already gets soft because of cooking, so your hypothesis doesn't affect most people anyways.
@@poppinc8145 its not my hypothesis...and cooking has changed quite a bit since the invention of the utensil so I'd wager you have no clue what you're talking about. I'll trust academic experts over random armchair expert thanks
@@poppinc8145 When was the last time you had meat? Next time you do, try using nothing but your teeth when eating it instead of a knife.
@MyVanir man I'd just put the whole thing on my mouth, the only reason cut my food is so that I would not eat too fast
@@MyVanir Exactly! Even if it is cooked a piece of meat and even vegetables that are eaten without cutting requires you to exert more force. cutting a steak, piece of chicken or even bread requires more effort
Thank you aloooot for this great video.
This is the exact story of my wisdom teeth and crookedness. I think
Learned about this from Westin Price. Thank you
1:42 I like how without context this implies humans evolve into croissants
What's more surprising is that it's more than just our diet? Our oral posture also very closely determines the absence or presence of crooked teeth. There's a book written on this teeth epidemic named, "Jaws". Do try to read it if you want perfect jaws and end this era of crooked teeth!!
What a good oral posture
That book is essentially the astrology version of oral health. There is absolutely nothing scientific about it, and nothing peer-reviewed. It is part of a growing epidemic of seemingly scientific books that appeal to people who want scientific answers that do not exist. The authors are charlatans who peddle pseudoscience. This is one of a long line of incorrect and completely unscientific books by the author.
Bro thinks im a shark
@@joeligma4721 💀
Thank you!
I had to wear these crazy things to fix my overbite, and these special braces worked my jaw out so much. It’s given me a mad jawline and my wisdom teeth have grown in with minimal problems.
I asked this question to my dentist wife today . Thanks to you for a detailed answer 😅🥲❤️
On the other hand, did they have nitrous?
Look up Mewing and Orthotropics, see if your dentist is helping or making things worse.
@@PROofHAPPYWHEELS stop spreading this mewing nonsense. The founder of mewing is already facing multiple lawsuits.
Sir, can you pleasw ask your dentist wife is it is moral & normal in India to extract canines (both upper & lower) to make space for braces? 😭 please I need confirmation
@@vaidehi_n hello. Canines extractions are not normal unless u have severely impacted canine which means they are deeply embedded in the bone and cannot erupt normally into your oral cavity. Are you sure it’s your permanent canines?
Woahh this timing is blowing my mind🤯
My sister just had her upper wisdom tooth removed last week and x-ray reports showed that her lower wisdom tooth were growing horizontally inside the gum, which caused immense pain all of a sudden. Surgery in the next week to remove them. My mom then explained this theory of how our facial structure, since a few generations, had been changing and kind of shrinking in the jawline, causing all this to happen.
Omg thats so close to each other....
And didnt they do an xray before removing any and therefore remove the lower ones as well or make a plan for one side to heal before removing the other?
And i hope your sister will get it sorted soon
@@JustMe-12345 yes did an x-ray first, saw that upper ones were normal, but lower ones were horizontally, that too inside the gum. So decided to remove the upper wisdom tooth, just pulling out was enough. Surgery needed for the lower ones. Maynot exactly be next week, it's her choice when to be done, earlier much better.
@@JustMe-12345 she said the pulled out part is fine now, healed, can eat normally. 🤗
That is really poorly done- to remove the uppers and then have to go right back in shortly to take out the lowers? Not good planning. The xray would have shown the relative position of those teeth. Should have been done all at once.
My cousin has her own teeth which she is very proud of. They are just terrible and no one in their right mind would want them. Her children grew up and one became a M.D. and the other a professional as well. She sent me family pictures of herself, hubby and proudly her two children. When I first looked at the picture my thought was, Oh, if she had had a third and it became a dentist. I had never seen such a family of horrible teeth in my life, but they didn't seem to n notice themselves. Most Americans, I find have wonderful teeth.
One thing that should also be mentioned is that jaw development has a lot to do with nursing well into toddlerhood vs. present day bottle feeding and pacifier use.
Jaw growth continues many years after cessation of breastfeeding/bottle feeding. How can it be a primary determinant of jaw growth?
@@drmxl91 Because if a child keeps the habit of swallowing the same way he did with the feeding bottle, this atypical swallowing will have an impact on his jaw development because he will swallow with his tongue moving forward instead of pushing the palate, which would have allowed his upper jaw to expand if he had a normal way of swallowing, which has become rarer in Western countries. People with abnormal way of swallowing often have a V-shape upper jaw, whereas people with normal swallowing have a U-shape jaw.
Was looking for this comment, thank you 😊
I hated the look of a pacifier and never let my children have one. They have beautiful teeth.
There are also genetic disorders that effect bones, hair, teeth, skin since early humans.
This hypothesis you mention totally makes sense.
This makes sense as it could also explain things like impulsively chewing on non food items, or nail bitting in some people, as it would make sense that if we recently ate harder foods on an evolutionary timescale that we would retain an instinct to chew harder things.
12.000 years is like 450/500 generatians. Incredible how fast the humand body adapts to its environment.
Pretty sure they're implying it's environmental more than genetic.
it’s not genetic…
@@bendover_7568 the jaw bone getting smaller is tho
@@sus4710 minute 4:12
@@bendover_7568 genetically or not the body adapts to its environment.
I have extremely messed up teeth, so bad to the point that people gasp when I open my mouth. Some are crooked, some are chipped, and I have some growing in places where they definently shouldn't be. Knowing that a caveman had better teeth than I ever will certainly feels... Interesting. I'm one of the lucky few who doesn't care about the way my teeth look though, and so I haven't undergone any procedures to fix them up. For every broken one I have a story to tell.
Look up Orthotropics and mewing.
it's all pov. if you go to asia they actually like crooked teeth better then straight. like a character thing. ive thought of moving there lol
I love the look of slightly crooked teeth they look so beautiful
@@tmoney8435 what part of asia are you talking about 💀💀asia isn't a country you can't generalise
Bro, I’ve had 4 teeth removed and have since been on braces (3 years now).
I’ll have to wear a permanent retainer for nearly my entire life since I’m 20 yo.
I freaking love watching these videos
My brother and I were raised on a homecooked, not particularly processed diet, and both of us got our third molars in with no problems, never needed braces and have overall pretty good teeth. Now, it could be genetics, since neither of our parents or grandparents needed braces, or it could be the cooking we grew up with, or a mix of both.
It's definitely genetics. This video is debunked pseudoscience bs and the majority of people commenting are insane. We don't have harsh survival requirements anymore. Many of our evolutionary problems have been solved and people with narrow jaws and severe dental crowding who would have probably died young and may not have had as much reproductive success in the past can now just get braces or safe and sterile dental surgery and proliferate their genes.
99% genetics. Not the diet unless you were eating nearly raw food and your teeth have been ground down to the point of being flat.
@@cvn6555 Read Nutrition and Physical Degeneration by Weston Price. He documented significant dental changes in just one generation between parents and their kids, just based on diet. The parents ate the traditional unprocessed community food, while the kids were shipped off to missionary school and fed white bread and jam. The book is full of pictures. Diet has everything to do with dental health.
@@michellejones715 Diet is a factor but is not the only factor. Genetic factors determine immunologic resistance to microorganisms, healing capacity, cell turnover, salivary volume and contents. Did you know that few people get decay and periodontal issues? Usually one or the other. Genetics is the reason. I have read a lot on this subject and one study will not change the volume of research before and after.
damn i wish. I didnt grow up in the US so i never ate junk or fast food but my teeth were all messed up by the time i was 7 lmao. My little sister who was born in the US around fast food has perfect teeth tho
This is one these questions I never thought I needed an answer to.
I agree with this video. I was raised on unprocessed foods, and my jaw is larger. My teeth came in straight, and I had room for my wisdom teeth.
i had two rounds of braces and an expander as a kid because of my very small jaw and incredibly crooked teeth. however my sister has mostly straight teeth. i was not picky as a child and we ate the same diet-lots of carrots and lots of chewing. however my grandpa has really crooked teeth (that look like mine did) and my mom has a small jaw. i think part of it must be genetic because i’m not sure how i could’ve reversed this. i also had no gaps between my baby teeth like i was supposed to.
I was the same way, I had a small v shaped jaw in spite of my adventurous eating habits and love of chewing on chicken bones.
Because of my small jaw and airway, I started grinding my teeth at night very young, and my jaw never got any wider from that, even though my molars were worn down.
I don’t think these theories add up. Why can an infant get proper jaw formation just from keeping good tongue posture while nursing… but children and adults need violent, strenuous chewing? What happened to the tongue posture theory? I thought the tongue was this mighty force that could change the shape of your whole face, no chewing required.
I’ve read that dental malocclusion actually begins in the womb, probably because of nutrient deficiencies. (Not a lot of chewing going on in utero.) And that makes more sense to me.
This blew my mind. Now I feel like I’m going to gather some seeds to give to my little kids haha. I wonder if in the future it’ll be common practice for dentists to recommend eating hard foods, maybe especially for kids, just like they recommend brushing and flossing.
I bet children will love the idea too because then they can more easily lose their baby teeth. (Money money money.)
This is just a hypothesis based on some research by some people. It also would not apply to all populations. It is interesting but there is nothing actionable here. There is even evidence that seeds and nuts are harmful to teeth.
They'll lose their income haha
they missed one important thing in the presentation - not only did the jaws shrink but the thickness of the skull and the size of the brain decreased - once we started eating grains instead of animal based diet - but that's is seems to a very unpopular thought these days, where veganism is being promoted...
@@beatahudeczek3548 Bingo, you are right :) There are still experts talking about how grains and sugar deteriorated skulls, but no one cares, it's easier to pretend mega corps aren't in it to make us sick.
I still have my wisdom teeth. They've never given me an issue at 44yo. My teeth are crooked from a fall at 15yo and because my parents didn't have health insurance, they were never fixed.
My teeth are close enough to perfect. Had room for all but my top 2 wisdom teeth, all my teeth came in straight, and the 9 fillings I had by age 13 I got removed recently and found out they were all on healthy teeth. My old dentist was just filling in teeth for no reason. So I have had 0 cavities ever.
I was the kid growing up who tried eating only meat at age 5 and 10, and succeeded at 15. With some weeks leading up to then I would just eat the meat from my meals and nothing but.
Have you continued being animal based or full carnivore? I hope you're talking to researchers in the animal based nutrition community as this is a useful case study!
This is so insane that we have crooked teeth when our ancestors didn't and nice video man :]
I'm a dentist and I will add this: teeth crowding begins when babies are less and less breastfed. Breastfeeding is supposed not only to feed the baby, but to develop the face and dental arches and to set nasal breathing.
That's interesting, would using a dummy then be able to replicate this effect?
@@scanningallvidzsobviously?
Makes sense. I was in karate as a kid, and one time I got a good look at the sensei’s knuckles. They were enormous. All the punching causes micro-fractures in the bone, and when it heals, the body makes the bone larger and tougher to compensate. I assume that’s exactly what happens to a very active jawbone, which then leaves more room for the teeth.
Edit: Apparently that’s not quite it. See the replies for medical explanations.
Thanks for offering us more common sense instead of only saying that we should eat less processed food which is a good idea too.
Chewing hard food doesn't cause microfractures. At most it may inhibit osteoclast activity
And those busted knuckles also have pain, permanent reduction in range of movement and may cause other conditions.
Which means we are not cars 😂we are getting tougher with use 🥳 I love it - shows that laziness is not an option 😂
@Mitchell Couchman yeh theres some basic orthodontics in what you said. You're explaining skeletal growth patterns as a result of resultant muscular forces. My comment was regarding saying it was due to 'microfractures'. Also Iook up functional appliance therapy outcomes (such as twin blocks) on true mandibular growth rather than protrusion. Lots of relapse later in life for kids that had functional appliances under the assumption there's true modulation of growth. Also yes palatal expansion happens with a tongue, but that's because there's a suture there. No suture for the mandible. Lots of malocclusion caused by retrognathia. Does a different diet influence mandibular growth? Maybe. But it's not due to microfractures
I listen so intently to everything that comes out of TED-Talks, because ALL of your speakers are so truthful, I can't remember one speaker who wasn't totally honest. Not one. So well vetted. So honest.
😂
Most people won't get the sarcasm
@@blondie8524It's ok as long as the smart ones are amused.
Well if you have opposing views, do share without being a smartass.
Cries in recuperating from wisdom teeth surgery and crowded teeth since kid so I have my premolars remove since 7 yo and has braces for 8 years😭. Shortly if I clean my teeth good my mouth finally should be perfect 😩🙌🏼
But this clarifies a bit the situation.
This isn't the only trend that's been directed from what's naturally healthy for humans. I remember there being quite a few more in Civilized to Death: The Price of Progress by Christopher Ryan. Really interesting read, if you want to shake up your world-view a little.
I wisdom teeth is coming out and I was wondering what's the science behind it. This video came at a perfect time.😃
I had six wisdom teeth get removed and it was expensive even with insurance. The amount of pain I was in from them made the extractions worth it.
I 100% agree with this
They also didn't eat a lot of sugar back then, so cavities weren't as much of a problem.
Cavities showed up with agriculture.
I’ve been saying this for years! Both my parents and I have naturally straight teeth whereas my younger brother born in the states has more crooked teeth. After noticing the difference, I realized that bc baby food is so prevalent over here, our diet started off very differently and thus probably resulted in the slight morphology of our teeth positions
Most babies I knew didn’t eat much puréed baby food, just raw vegetables & fruit & cooked meat. Some still had baby teeth grow in crooked.
"over here" wherever that is -- British have the worst teeth in the world.
Western food lacks nutrition which doesn't allow for proper fetal and child development including nutrients to build good teeth. Our genetic code can only build the organism when it has the raw materials to do so.
@@johnc.8298 Very true. You are what you eat after all.
@@johnc.8298you said this so so well. Thank you
For those looking into this topic and wanting to do there own research I recommend these books:
Jaws: The Story of a Hidden Epidemicby by Sandra Kahn, Paul R. Ehrlich
Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor
I have a small jaw and teeth, but a very bad bite. I had to wear braces from 12-14, but after they were removed, a year later my teeth shifted again and I will have to wear braces again😍, because due to malocclusion, my joint in the jaw feels bad. Now I am 17 years old, I really do not want to experience all this again, but the wrong bite really ruins my life. I am grateful that i have an opportunity to fix that, but... SO TIRED
orthotropics is also an interesting aspect to this as much of proper mouth posture seems to be forgotten generationally. "mouth breathing" from what i remember can lead to a receding jawline as the skull develops and if that posture is not corrected, the plates will start to settle and make these shapes permanent.
Yes the even did. a study with two monkeys on one they taped the nostrils so it would be forced to breathe through its mouth and the other breathed through nose. The teeth started to crowd on the monkey with mouth breathing
Our development from being hunter-gatherers to an agricultural lifestyle definitely earned their title as a double-edged sword. Or in this case, a double-edged spear.
In more ways than one. As a species we traded the problems of food insecurity and danger from predators for the problems of awful teeth, higher disease rates, frequent accidents, oppressive governments, murder, and war. Only the first two have been dealt with to any significant degree over the last 5000 years.
why the spear analogy? The sword was good enough... Why you gotta make me cringe like that, man? :(
@@MyouKyuubi because OP noted development of humanity evolving from hubter-gatherers to agriculture. May as well use the spear in comparison rather than a sword.
@@Chinothebad But he used both, making it cringy...
@@MyouKyuubi I fail to see how its cringy. Besides that, spears don't get enough love.
We need to actively consider the effects of making everything so easy for us.
Many things in life could still be easier, but our bodies evolved to not only deal with certain issues.. but to develop side-by-side with them.
It's why astronauts become weak when staying outside of Earth's gravity for too long. Gravity may be a hinderence in some ways, but we evolved to exist under it.
That was brilliant. And fun to watch as you’re eating a little lunch!
I’m one of those people who didn’t need braces and still has their wisdom teeth. My mom wasn’t so lucky. Has had a lifetime of teeth problems, and she now has them all yanked for falsies. I count myself fairly lucky, and I do what I can to not take it for granted (brushing, flossing, no sugary sodas, etc). I also make it a point to chew sugar free gum regularly to work my jaw muscles in the hope of keeping my muscles and bone strong.
I do know that generalized anxiety has also messed up my teeth. Because of anxiety i developed bruxism and I subconsciously grinded down parts of my teeth, thankfully it's not that noticable but yeah, I definietely think stress, well being and environment has to do with it as well. Now that i know how to manage my anxiety it's not a problem anymore, and I highly doubt our ancestors had constant stress like we do in modern times.
Thanks for the amazing animation and explanation TED-Ed!! BTW we can also prevent tooth crowding by visiting dental clinics at an early age, learned this from kriss ai ..
I’m a hunter myself and have some skull mounts of animals. I know that after 1 year of drying, teeth straighten out because the jaws dry out and shrink and there’s no soft tissue left holding them in their pre-drying position. Are they sure they’re looking at teeth in the true position they would have been in when people were alive?
This is interesting because I have had a very bad teeth clenching and grinding issue since I was a kid to the point where I had a dentist tell me at about age 13 or so that my teeth were as flat as tables. That being said my teeth all grew in straight and I even got my wisdom teeth in ok while my younger brother who didn’t have this issue had to have braces for a long time. Curious.
That is interesting. Perhaps clenching and grinding at night also had something to do with keeping our ancestor's teeth straight.
@@mick4563 I clench and grind my teeth at night and my teeth are crooked :/
@@ViolyreArt same 😅
I grind my teeth in my sleep due to anxiety, have since I was little. Mine are messed up. Recently even found out that I have what's technically considered an overbite, which is probably a big contributor to my TMJ. So idk if it's teeth grinding that kept yours straight. But who knows.
I think the important part is where your tongue is while u close ur mouth mine is at the roof I have straight teeth my friends who also clench their teeth have crocked teeth bc their tongue is not even touching the roof no contact points while I have multiple contact points maybe that can help the teeth knowing where to grow
Regarding the milling process I understand that small fragments of stone often infiltrated the the food and were consequently chewed. This practice led to the erosion of tooth enamel and caused tooth decay. I have also seen evidence of an abscess in the jaws of some skulls. However the perfect smiles of early man are still very impressive!
I’m in my early 40s and got Invisalign 6 months ago. I never had enough money to fix my teeth… I had to first have two extractions, get two implants, and also get a crown… So, the journey has been… Expensive.
My smile is night and day. I had a gap on my right side from an old Army extraction that was an empty space. I had bottom and top crowding… I just smiled less.
Looking at my teeth and smile in the mirror, and knowing the cost makes me sad for people who can’t afford good dental care.
What a strange world we live in.
I had braces for almost two years and I wore my retainers religiously. Almost two years after that I lost them and my bones shifted including my hip and pelvis!! When I stopped using my retainers it caused my bones to move and I was in so much pain!
Weston a price studied this really well about 90 years ago. Modern medicine struggles to acknowledge the role nutrition plays in health. It's really wild. Read a chapter of his book. It's all available online because the copyright expired.
Anything made in 1928 or earlier has a copyright expired
Westin price was a kook. It is not a medical conspiracy. It is very much that there is no scientific basis for the kooks rants. And medicine certainly does address nutrition, there are literally nutritionists who study nutrition. Why would you make such a clearly false statement?
Fascinating. I was born with a mouth that was too small for all my teeth. Had major tooth crowding. Had to have my molars pulled when I was younger so my other teeth could spread out. My wisdom teeth came out when I was older and were impacted. Even today, I bite the sides of my cheek when chewing. My father and brother had the same problem. My mother's teeth were perfect. But she had to have all her teeth pulled at 24 y.o. due to weak gums. But that was way back in the early 1920s where people didn't have the dental care they have today.
@Mitchell Couchman No
It begins much earlier than eating solid food. The action of breastfeeding in newborn up until a child was AT LEAST 24 months old presses the tongue into the roof of the mouth and creates a wider upper and lower jaw with more room for teeth.
Great video
One thing this video didn't mention was survivorship bias. It makes sense that a lot of the fossil record would have nice teeth because the ones who did would be more likely to survive to maturity and pass on their genes. We know that in the past the state of one's mouth could have a dramatic effect on overall health and was a quite common factor in one's death.
Concur; first thing that struck me!
They are fossils though, what survivorship?
@@sdash0dude heard another clever term and just throws it everywhere without thinking😂
explained my dr mew already, the more harder food you eat, the better your teeth align, but come at the cost of teeth wear.
But after wisdom teeth had grown I think the problem is solved.
Even if the person start to eat more process food, the teeth will be ok
That makes perfect sence. Ive got a very narrow jaw and have asked my dentist to remove some of my teath but they wont remove healthy teeth in uk. I have never had wisdom teeth removed and am getting more crowded as i get older. Im not in pain but am getting more crowded and crooked as i get older, with healthy teeth
Nice information to chew on 👍🏿
Something they missed about this is the now common mouth breathing causing the narrowing of our faces. The more we mouth breath, our facial muscles pull downwards, causing facial narrowing and that includes our sinuses as well, making it even harder to breath out of our noses.
I’m a nose breather should I still only breathe out of my nose? What about when you run because it’s hard to just breathe out your nose😅
@@meilanimenes134 it’s fine in situations where you feel you NEED to
Who breathes through their mouth??
@@orangutanu your mom
@@intensellylit4100 lmaooooo