Facial Development
Cross-source consensus on Facial Development from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Ancient skulls typically show wide jaws, straight teeth, and flat palates, whereas modern skulls more often show narrow jaws, high-arched palates, and crowded teeth. — Breath and the New Science of a Lost Art
- A high-arched or V-shaped upper palate rises into the nasal airway and can impede nasal airflow. — Breath and the New Science of a Lost Art
- Crooked teeth are primarily a jaw-size problem: the mouth has become too small for the teeth, not a primary tooth defect. — Breath and the New Science of a Lost Art
- Childhood oral posture, chewing, and nasal breathing can influence facial and airway development. — Breath and the New Science of a Lost Art
- The assumption that facial bone cannot remodel after age 30 is inaccurate; bone can remodel when given appropriate stimulus. — Breath and the New Science of a Lost Art
- Adult palatal expansion devices can widen the upper palate, increase airway size, and add bone to the face. — Breath and the New Science of a Lost Art