| Literature DB >> 32973408 |
Sandra Kahn, Paul Ehrlich, Marcus Feldman, Robert Sapolsky, Simon Wong.
Abstract
Contemporary humans are living very different lives from those of their ancestors, and some of the changes have had serious consequences for health. Multiple chronic "diseases of civilization," such as cardiovascular problems, cancers, ADHD, and dementias are prevalent, increasing morbidity rates. Stress, including the disruption of traditional sleep patterns by modern lifestyles, plays a prominent role in the etiology of these diseases, including obstructive sleep apnea. Surprisingly, jaw shrinkage since the agricultural revolution, leading to an epidemic of crooked teeth, a lack of adequate space for the last molars (wisdom teeth), and constricted airways, is a major cause of sleep-related stress. Despite claims that the cause of this jaw epidemic is somehow genetic, the speed with which human jaws have changed, especially in the last few centuries, is much too fast to be evolutionary. Correlation in time and space strongly suggests the symptoms are phenotypic responses to a vast natural experiment-rapid and dramatic modifications of human physical and cultural environments. The agricultural and industrial revolutions have produced smaller jaws and less-toned muscles of the face and oropharynx, which contribute to the serious health problems mentioned above. The mechanism of change, research and clinical trials suggest, lies in orofacial posture, the way people now hold their jaws when not voluntarily moving them in speaking or eating and especially when sleeping. The critical resting oral posture has been disrupted in societies no longer hunting and gathering. Virtually all aspects of how modern people function and rest are radically different from those of our ancestors. We also briefly discuss treatment of jaw symptoms and possible clinical cures for individuals, as well as changes in society that might lead to better care and, ultimately, prevention.Entities:
Keywords: cultural environment; epidemic; evolution; jaw; orthodontics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32973408 PMCID: PMC7498344 DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biaa073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioscience ISSN: 0006-3568 Impact factor: 8.589
Changes in the orofacial-respiratory environment induced by agricultural revolution and industrialization, with possible impacts on oral posture and jaw development and health.
| Hunter-gatherer societies (physical development focus) | Industrialized societies (intellectual development focus) |
| Long breast feeding, specialized muscle use | Insufficient nursing to develop posture or to hold muscle tone |
| No bottle feeding, normal physiological delivery | Strong milk flow in bottle feeding, spoon feeding disrupts normal swallowing, Pacifiers and bottle nipple changing tongue posture |
| Wean to adult diet, baby learns what and how to eat | Baby food, pap, spoon feeding disrupts self-learning |
| “Chewy” diet, and proper swallow, encourages salivation (PH, cleaning, remineralization, first digestion, etc.) | Increasingly liquid diet, bypasses positive nutritional and developmental effects from vigorous chewing, salivation |
| Sparse populations, less viral transmission, fewer stuffy noses | Dense populations, more nasal blockage, lead to hanging mouth open at rest |
| Much time spent outside, less allergen exposure | Little time spent outside more exposure to concentrated allergens |
| Sleeping on the ground, head not pillowed | Sleeping on a mat or bed, head pillowed |
| Sleep relatively exposed to predators or enemies, snoring selected againsta | Sleep securely indoors, snoring less lethal |
| Body, nasal breathing and general posture maintained | Body, nasal breathing and general posture often ignored |
|
| Couch potato, cell phone addict, teeth kept mostly apart at rest, nose frequently blocked, mouth often hung open, tongue held low partially resting over teeth kept apart |
Note: Environmental changes possibly influencing jaw development in modern societies. Italic text represents the correct posture to provide an environment for normal jaw development. aSpeculative.
Figure 1.Indian Grandfather born in village who had come to England as a young man with his children. Son in center. Grandchild (right) was born in industrialized society. You can see a progressive reduction in the forward dentofacial growth in the three generations. Photographs: John Mew.
Figure 2.Allergy can block a young person's nostrils as thoroughly as plastic plugs can block those of a rhesus monkey. Look at the consequences in the present figure for an attractive youth (left) getting a gerbil for a pet. He was allergic to the gerbil, and the resulting nasal congestion and mouth breathing redirected the growth of his jaw with sad results (center and right). Photographs: John Mew.
Figure 3.Treating children with baby dentition can help develop the jaws and improve their breathing. Note high palate on the top left (upper jaw before) and top right much flatter (after) forwardontic expansion and postural treatment. In the lower left (lower jaw before) and right (after), note there is much more space for the tongue after 3 months of treatment. Photographs: Sandra Kahn and María Jóse Muñoz.
Figure 4.Profiles of children being treated by postural techniques. Left before, right after. Note on the bottom left child, holding chin high to keep airway open, on right normal posture, wide smile and gaps between baby teeth visible. Photographs: Simon Wong.