Harmony and balance between form and function are essential for maintaining adequate physiological conditions. Recurrent neck pain, frequently broken prostheses, headaches, back pain, balance disorders, neck and shoulder pain, and relapsing occlusal treatments.
Have we ever wondered if the problem was the dentist's approach, our approach? Have we stopped to think if there was something we overlooked behind that failure?
Would it be logical to rehabilitate a patient's occlusion within a system that has led them to destruction?
Can a postural problem lead to the failure of our oral rehabilitation?
We have a large percentage of patients in our practice who are dysfunctional and in pain, with an asymmetric picture of symptoms and clinical signs: muscle tension, pain, joint noises, injuries and/or loss of dental elements more evident on one side than the other. Sometimes we do not know enough about the terrain on which we place our large and precise rehabilitations, to which we have dedicated so much care and study time.
We have treatments that are perfect at a mechanical and aesthetic level, but for the postural system there is a blockage because that new position of the teeth is not integrated at a sensory-perceptive level.
Why is this?
Because the patient's mouth was not evaluated in the postural context.
The stomatognathic system influences the rest of the body through different mechanisms; we also know that alterations in another part of the body, such as a plantar irritative spine, cause variations in the postural system and adaptations in the stomatognathic system. This fact has been demonstrated in different scientific publications.
Evaluating patients from a global point of view, and knowing how to detect these warning signs before performing an irreversible dental treatment such as an occlusal rehabilitation, can help us avoid failures, which unfortunately are excessively frequent.
CV