Difference between revisions of "Introduction/Landing/Malocclusion Rethought"

Line 1: Line 1:
__NOTOC__
{{DISPLAYTITLE: Malocclusion Rethought — Occlusal Dysmorphisms}}
<!-- HERO -->
<div style="background:#f2f7ff; border-radius:14px; padding:28px; text-align:center; margin-bottom:22px;">
<div style="background:#f2f7ff; border-radius:14px; padding:28px; text-align:center; margin-bottom:22px;">
   <h1 style="margin:.2rem 0; font-size:2.2rem; line-height:1.2;">Malocclusion Rethought</h1>
   <h1 style="margin:.2rem 0; font-size:2.2rem; line-height:1.2;">Malocclusion Rethought</h1>
Line 4: Line 8:
     From “Malocclusion” to a broader paradigm: <b>Occlusal Dysmorphisms</b>.
     From “Malocclusion” to a broader paradigm: <b>Occlusal Dysmorphisms</b>.
   </p>
   </p>
<span class="plainlinks">[https://www.masticationpedia.org/index.php/Introduction
<span style="display:inline-block;padding:10px 22px;border-radius:9999px;background:linear-gradient(90deg,#5b86ff,#36d1dc);color:#fff;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600;box-shadow:0 2px 8px rgba(0,0,0,.15);">👉 Read the full chapter</span>]</span>
</div>
<!-- SECTION EXTRACT -->
<div style="background:#ffffff; border-radius:10px; padding:22px; margin-bottom:28px; border:1px solid #eee;">
== Malocclusion Rethought ==
"Malocclusion" (from Latin <i>malum</i> = bad) traditionally labels an improper “closure” of teeth. Yet modern clinical science shows that function cannot be reduced to mechanics alone. Electrophysiological findings (e.g., symmetry in motor-evoked potentials, jaw-jerk, and silent period) often reveal balanced trigeminal dynamics even in the presence of occlusal discrepancies.


  <span class="plainlinks">
This challenges the conventional label “malocclusion” and supports a broader concept: <b>Occlusal Dysmorphisms</b>. Within a complex-systems view of mastication, neuromuscular coherence can coexist with occlusal asymmetries, urging interdisciplinary diagnostics that integrate occlusion with neurophysiology to achieve stable outcomes and reduce relapses.
    [https://www.masticationpedia.org/index.php/Introduction
</div>
    <span style="display:inline-block;padding:10px 22px;border-radius:9999px;
 
                  background:linear-gradient(90deg,#5b86ff,#36d1dc);
<!-- IMAGES (optional but recommended) -->
                  color:#fff;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600;
<gallery mode="slideshow">
                  box-shadow:0 2px 8px rgba(0,0,0,.15);">
File:Occlusal Centric view in open and cross bite patient.jpg|'''Fig. 1a:''' Open bite and crossbite case (occlusal view).
      👉 Read the full chapter
File:Bilateral Electric Transcranial Stimulation.jpg|'''Fig. 1b:''' Bilateral MEP symmetry in masseter muscles.
    </span>]
File:Jaw Jerk .jpg|'''Fig. 1c:''' Jaw-jerk reflex indicating functional symmetry.
File:Mechanic Silent Period.jpg|'''Fig. 1d:''' Mechanical silent period (balanced neuromuscular dynamics).
</gallery>
 
<h3>📑 References</h3>
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31175796/ Interdisciplinary diagnostics of malocclusions — Smaglyuk et al., 2019]
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23949448/ Anterior open bite review — Reichert et al., 2014]
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5962250/ Early crossbite protocols — Miamoto et al., 2018]
 
<!-- CTA -->
<div style="text-align:center; margin:34px 0 8px;">
  <span class="colour-button" style="background:#ccc; color:#333; border:none; opacity:.95;">
    [https://www.masticationpedia.org/index.php/Introduction#Dental_Malocclusion Explore the full section in the Introduction →]
   </span>
   </span>
</div>
<div style="text-align:center; margin-top:16px; font-size:13px; opacity:.75;">
  Masticationpedia — open scientific platform for dentistry and medicine.
</div>
</div>

Revision as of 18:09, 19 September 2025


Malocclusion Rethought

From “Malocclusion” to a broader paradigm: Occlusal Dysmorphisms.

[https://www.masticationpedia.org/index.php/Introduction 👉 Read the full chapter]


Malocclusion Rethought

"Malocclusion" (from Latin malum = bad) traditionally labels an improper “closure” of teeth. Yet modern clinical science shows that function cannot be reduced to mechanics alone. Electrophysiological findings (e.g., symmetry in motor-evoked potentials, jaw-jerk, and silent period) often reveal balanced trigeminal dynamics even in the presence of occlusal discrepancies.

This challenges the conventional label “malocclusion” and supports a broader concept: Occlusal Dysmorphisms. Within a complex-systems view of mastication, neuromuscular coherence can coexist with occlusal asymmetries, urging interdisciplinary diagnostics that integrate occlusion with neurophysiology to achieve stable outcomes and reduce relapses.

📑 References

 Masticationpedia — open scientific platform for dentistry and medicine.