Malocclusion Rethought — Occlusal Dysmorphisms
Malocclusion Rethought
From “Malocclusion” to a broader paradigm: Occlusal Dysmorphisms.
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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
- Interdisciplinary diagnostics of malocclusions — Smaglyuk et al., 2019
- Anterior open bite review — Reichert et al., 2014
- Early crossbite protocols — Miamoto et al., 2018
<a href="https://www.masticationpedia.org/index.php/Introduction#Dental_Malocclusion" style="display:inline-block;padding:10px 20px;border-radius:9999px; background:linear-gradient(90deg,#5b8ef7,#ff7a18); color:#fff;text-decoration:none;font-weight:600; box-shadow:0 2px 8px rgba(0,0,0,.15);"> 👉 Explore the full section in the Introduction </a>