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What Is An Orthodontic Adjustment?

Orthodontic_Adjustment

Every 4 to 6 weeks, you go to your orthodontist to get your braces “tightened” or “adjusted.” Sounds awful, doesn’t it? Well, cast aside your visions of Medieval torture devices. Nothing is really “tightened.” It’s really very simple.

This is usually what happens during an orthodontic adjustment:

That’s it! Do your teeth hurt? Take some pain reliever to help you deal with it. The discomfort will probably last a few days, then dissipate. You may need to eat only soft foods for a few days. Protein shakes, such as the Atkins or Slim Fast shakes, made ideal meal replacements if chewing even soft food is uncomfortable. Within a week, most people an usually eat normal food again. After a few months, adjustments won’t hurt as much (really!)

After you have had braces for more than 6 months, your teeth get used to the extra pressure. At this point, an adjustment might not hurt at all, but your teeth usually feel sore for about a week afterwards. For some people, the teeth don’t feel sore again until the next adjustment. But for others, the pain dissipates for a week or two, and then a week before the next adjustment, the teeth are sore again. Why is this?

The cell regeneration process occurs after an adjustment. Your teeth are under force and move and causes some cells (bone, tissue) to break down and new cells to regenerate. After the regeneration happens the teeth and supporting structures begin giving and moving again and the cycle continues. This is why most orthodontists see patients every 4-5 weeks. The cell regeneration process typically takes about 3 weeks and that gives patients enough time after an adjustment to be ready for another one.

Because today’s wires move teeth slowly over a long period of time, the whole cell regeneration doesn’t stop/go/stop/go as it used to with older style wires, now it just moves your teeth continually. Movement continues until the wire is fully back to the original size and shape, at which time you are ready for a stiffer and larger arch wire. (Thanks to ArchWired reader Mary from Oregon for this last helpful piece of information, which she got from her orthodontist!)

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