15/11/2025
🚨One missing tooth is never “just one tooth.”
The moment a tooth is lost, the entire mouth begins to shift — quietly at first, but with real long-term consequences.
When the empty space stays untreated, neighboring teeth slowly drift and tilt into the gap. This leads to misalignment, uneven spacing, and harder cleaning, allowing food to pack in and increasing the chances of cavities and gum infection.
The opposing tooth in the opposite jaw also begins to drop into the space — a process called supereruption. This weakens the bite and disrupts the natural balance of the jaws.
As the bite changes, extra pressure lands on the TMJ. Over time, this can trigger jaw pain, clicking sounds, stiffness, or even recurring headaches. Chewing efficiency also drops, forcing other teeth to overwork and wear down faster.
Below the missing tooth, the jawbone starts shrinking because it’s no longer being stimulated during chewing. As the bone thins, facial support is lost, giving the face a slightly sunken or prematurely aged look.
Even worse, trapped food and inflammation around the tilted teeth can spread beyond the mouth and aggravate systemic conditions such as heart disease, diabetes complications, or existing medical problems.
✅ The solution: Replace the missing tooth early — with an implant, bridge, or denture. Restoring even one tooth protects alignment, bite strength, bone health, and overall well-being.