e hold in our mouths the legacy of our evolution. We rarely consider
just how amazing our teeth are. They break food without themselves being
broken, up to millions of times over the course of a lifetime; and they
do it built from the very same raw materials as the foods they are
breaking. Nature is truly an inspired engineer.
But our teeth are, at the
same time, really messed up. Think about it. Do you have impacted wisdom
teeth? Are your lower front teeth crooked or out of line? Do your
uppers jut out over your lowers? Nearly all of us have to say yes to at
least one of these questions, unless we’ve had dental work. It’s as if
our teeth are too big to fit properly in our jaws, and there isn’t
enough room in the back or front for them all. It just doesn’t make
sense that such an otherwise well-designed system would be so
ill-fitting. Other animals tend to have
perfectly aligned teeth. Our distant hominin ancestors did too; and so
do the few remaining peoples today who live a traditional hunting and
gathering lifestyle. I am a dental anthropologist at the University of
Arkansas, and I work with the Hadza foragers of Africa’s Great Rift
Valley in Tanzania. The first thing you notice when you look into a
Hadza mouth is that they’ve got a lot of teeth. Most have 20 back teeth,
whereas the rest of us tend to have 16 erupted and working. Hadza also
typically have a tip-to-tip bite between the upper and lower front
teeth, and the edges of their lowers align to form a perfect, flawless
arch. In other words, the sizes of Hadza teeth and jaws match perfectly.
The same goes for our fossil forebears and for our nearest living
relatives, the monkeys and apes.
So why don’tourteeth
fit properly in the jaw? The short answer is not that our teeth are too
large, but that our jaws are too small to fit them in. Let me explain.
Human teeth are covered with a hard cap of enamel that forms from the
inside out. The cells that make the cap move outward toward the eventual
surface as the tooth forms, leaving a trail of enamel behind. If you’ve
ever wondered why your teeth can’t grow or repair themselves when they
break or develop cavities, it’s because the cells that make enamel die
and are shed when a tooth erupts. So the sizes and shapes of our teeth
are genetically preprogrammed. They cannot change in response to
conditions in the mouth.
But the jaw is a different
story. Its size depends both on genetics and environment; and it grows
longer with heavy use, particularly during childhood, because of the way
bone responds to stress. The evolutionary biologist Daniel Lieberman at
Harvard University conducted an elegantstudyin 2004 on hyraxes
fed soft, cooked foods and tough, raw foods. Higher chewing strains
resulted in more growth in the bone that anchors the teeth. He showed
that the ultimate length of a jaw depends on the stress put on it during
chewing. The way the human jaw grows depends on a combination of genetics and diet. Nevit Dilmen/Wikimedia CommonsSelection for jaw length
is based on the growth expected, given a hard or tough diet. In this
way, diet determines how well jaw length matches tooth size. It is a
fine balancing act, and our species has had 200,000 years to get it
right. The problem for us is that, for most of that time, our ancestors
didn’t feed their children the kind of mush we feed ours today. Our
teeth don’t fit because they evolved instead to match the longer jaw
that would develop in a more challenging strain environment. Ours are
too short because we don’t give them the workout nature expects us to. There’s plenty of evidence
for this. The dental anthropologist Robert Corruccini at Southern
Illinois University has seen the effects bycomparingurban dwellers and rural peoples
in and around the city of Chandigarh in northern India—soft breads and
mashed lentils on the one hand, coarse millet and tough vegetables on
the other. He has alsoseenit from one generation to the next
in the Pima peoples of Arizona, following the opening of a commercial
food-processing facility on the reservation. Diet makes a huge
difference. I remember asking my wife not to cut our daughters’ meat
into such small pieces when they were young. “Let them chew,” I begged.
She replied that she’d rather pay for braces than have them choke. I
lost that argument.
Crowded,
crooked, misaligned, and impacted teeth are huge problems that have
clear aesthetic consequences, but can also affect chewing and lead to
decay. Half of us could benefit from orthodontic treatment. Those
treatments often involve pulling out or carving down teeth to match
tooth row with jaw length. But does this approach really make sense from
an evolutionary perspective? Some clinicians think not. And one of my
colleagues at Arkansas, the bioarchaeologist Jerry Rose, has joined
forces with the local orthodontist Richard Roblee with this very
question in mind. Their recommendation? That clinicians should focus
more on growing jaws, especially for children. For adults, surgical
options for stimulating bone growth are gaining momentum, too, and can
lead to shorter treatment times.
As a final thought, tooth
crowding isn’t the only problem that comes from a shorter jaw. Sleep
apnea is another. A smaller mouth means less space for the tongue, so it
can fall back more easily into the throat during sleep, potentially
blocking the airway. It should come as no surprise that appliances and
even surgery to pull the jaw forward are gaining traction in treating
obstructive sleep apnea. For better and for worse,
we hold in our mouths the legacy of our evolution. We might be stuck
with an oral environment that our ancestors never had to contend with,
but recognizing this can help us deal with it in better ways. Think
about that the next time you smile and look in a mirror.
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