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 Bite Engineering 

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Correct bite engineering is important for health, stability, and longevity of teeth and restorations, bone support of the teeth, the jaw joints and muscles. When the jaw is relaxed and you lightly close all teeth should touch evenly, like a door closing in the door frame. When you bite hard, the jaw should not shift or move, again like a door closing all the way without binding. When you rub the teeth from side to side and front to back, the front six teeth upper and lower should smoothly slide across each other and the back teeth should not interfere, bump or get in the way. Think of the front wheel of a tricycle smoothly guiding movement of the tricycle. Dragging your feet on the ground as the tricycle moves is like back teeth interfering.

If there are bite engineering problems, teeth and restorations can wear out, break, get loose or sensitive. Or the jaw joints and muscles may get sore or painful. That's why a bite engineering check is so important. And that's why Dr. Tarantola pays close attention to the bite engineering of your teeth. After a 21 Point exam and diagnosis, he may recommend a bite adjustment to correctly engineer your bite. It is a precise procedure that is always done first on models of your mouth. And before that procedure is done, a bite splint may be prescribed to relax the muscles and allow the joints to stabalize first.

In the photos above, #1 is a "mis-engineered" bite. The blue dot on the tooth in the lower right corner of the photo is the only tooth touching when the jaw was relaxed. #2 is after the adjustment and you can see marks on all the teeth. This shows that now all teeth are touching evenly. #3 shows what happened before when he rubbed side to side. You can see red marks on a lot of the back teeth. Remember in these rubbing movements, the back teeth should not touch, only the front six. In #4 you can see this and in #2 you can see no red on back teeth now.

The result is a happy, correctly engineered bite!


Member of the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology, an organization dedicated to Biological Dentistry. Biological dentists recognize the impact of toxic materials and relate it to dental and physiological health. These dentists are concerned with the integrity of the oral cavity and use materials and procedures in their practices that are systemically compatible.

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Jacksonville Fl Invisalign Dentist Dr. Gregory Tarantola

All content on this site copyrighted 2006

Gregory J. Tarantola, D.D.S.
4131 University Blvd So
Bldg 10
Jacksonville, Fl. #2216
904-737-5511

Email: drtarantola@bellsouth.net

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