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Discussion High FWHR and narrow palate, is it truly narrow? let's find out

akdevilhunter

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as per i know, and as per my research, according to chat gpt there are two types of narrow palates, one is skeletal and other is due to dental issues (lingual incilination of teeths) , so dental narrow palate isn't truly due to skeletal issues which mean due to low tongue posture or maybe to compensate the wide palate, teeths move inwards and make palate appear narrow which isn't really narrow.

such examples are henry canvil, matt bomer, jordan barret etc, whose palates seems narrow (they show 6 teeths when smiling) but in the posterior part of palate, they have wide palates, who else agree with this?
 
as per i know, and as per my research, according to chat gpt there are two types of narrow palates, one is skeletal and other is due to dental issues (lingual incilination of teeths) , so dental narrow palate isn't truly due to skeletal issues which mean due to low tongue posture or maybe to compensate the wide palate, teeths move inwards and make palate appear narrow which isn't really narrow.

such examples are henry canvil, matt bomer, jordan barret etc, whose palates seems narrow (they show 6 teeths when smiling) but in the posterior part of palate, they have wide palates, who else agree with this?

source: chat gpt.
dnr, don't care
 
as per i know, and as per my research, according to chat gpt there are two types of narrow palates, one is skeletal and other is due to dental issues (lingual incilination of teeths) , so dental narrow palate isn't truly due to skeletal issues which mean due to low tongue posture or maybe to compensate the wide palate, teeths move inwards and make palate appear narrow which isn't really narrow.

such examples are henry canvil, matt bomer, jordan barret etc, whose palates seems narrow (they show 6 teeths when smiling) but in the posterior part of palate, they have wide palates, who else agree with this?
It's statistically very rare for it to be a tooth only cause and not due to skeletal. We're talking about very rare. Actually, I would go as far to say it's impossible.

When we refer to a 'narrow palate', we're mainly referring to the arches in the mouth. If your teeth are creating the 'feeling' of a narrow palate, then it's not actually narrow, it's just impacted or crooked teeth. It'd be fixable via braces.

Your logic doesn't make sens in how you think narrow palates don't exist as a skeletal issue but rather purely as a dental one.
 
It's statistically very rare for it to be a tooth only cause and not due to skeletal. We're talking about very rare. Actually, I would go as far to say it's impossible.

When we refer to a 'narrow palate', we're mainly referring to the arches in the mouth. If your teeth are creating the 'feeling' of a narrow palate, then it's not actually narrow, it's just impacted or crooked teeth. It'd be fixable via braces.

Your logic doesn't make sens in how you think narrow palates don't exist as a skeletal issue but rather purely as a dental one.
not really narrow, but palletes like henry cavil, and jordan barret in which teeths are incilined inwards with a lot degree, its not that much narrow like long faces, but slightly narrow due to minor crookedness, ofc if teeths are heavily crooked you have skeletal issue
 
It's statistically very rare for it to be a tooth only cause and not due to skeletal. We're talking about very rare. Actually, I would go as far to say it's impossible.

When we refer to a 'narrow palate', we're mainly referring to the arches in the mouth. If your teeth are creating the 'feeling' of a narrow palate, then it's not actually narrow, it's just impacted or crooked teeth. It'd be fixable via braces.

Your logic doesn't make sens in how you think narrow palates don't exist as a skeletal issue but rather purely as a dental one.
what do you think about jordan barret, henry cavil, and matt bomer pallete, in which they show only 6 teeth smile, and their palate has a weird shape, but posterior part of pallete is raelly wide
 
It's statistically very rare for it to be a tooth only cause and not due to skeletal. We're talking about very rare. Actually, I would go as far to say it's impossible.

When we refer to a 'narrow palate', we're mainly referring to the arches in the mouth. If your teeth are creating the 'feeling' of a narrow palate, then it's not actually narrow, it's just impacted or crooked teeth. It'd be fixable via braces.

Your logic doesn't make sens in how you think narrow palates don't exist as a skeletal issue but rather purely as a dental one.
what do you think about jordan barret, henry cavil, and matt bomer pallete, in which they show only 6 teeth smile, and their palate has a weird shape, but posterior part of pallete is raelly wide
 
what do you think about jordan barret, henry cavil, and matt bomer pallete, in which they show only 6 teeth smile, and their palate has a weird shape, but posterior part of pallete is raelly wide
I don't have a strong opinion of it; it is just what it is. I don't think it's the most aesthetically pleasing look but sometimes it's not worth to get surgery to correct it.
 
So palate width is just cope unless its super narrow?
Depends what you mean by cope.

The more narrow it is, it definitely effects your appearance more negatively. It depends on each case, but in most cases I would not say it's negative enough to get it 'corrected' as an adult. When it comes to getting an palatal expander (the most common treatment to getting it fixed), it's normally done during development. The jaw is still developing during this process, which is why it's normally done in development.

The healing process and cost is dramatically different in adults than kids who are already getting or plan to get braces, for example. Sometimes you will also need to get braces again or during the process if you've already gotten them previously, because sometimes the teeth will form noticeable gaps, which costs even more money and time.
 
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