WatchTeeth Grinding (Bruxism)
Why nighttime teeth grinding, or bruxism, deserves your attention
Many patients only learn they grind when Dr. Lauren Brammeier points out the telltale wear patterns at a checkup. Bruxism, the chronic clenching or grinding of the teeth, generates up to 150 pounds of pressure between your jaws, usually while you sleep and have no idea it's happening. Over time that force flattens front teeth, chips edges, fractures back teeth, and wears enamel down to the softer dentin beneath.
Watch the video to see what happens inside your mouth as you grind and why the damage builds quietly year after year. The signs don't always stay near the teeth either; they can surface as jaw pain, morning headaches, facial soreness, or unexplained tooth sensitivity. Mild grinding in kids is common and usually outgrown, while persistent grinding in adults rarely resolves on its own.
The good news is that bruxism is highly manageable when it's caught early. Most often the answer is a custom-fitted night guard that cushions the bite and shields the enamel. When the grinding stems from jaw-muscle tension, Botox treatment can relax the masseter muscles and significantly reduce both the grinding and the headaches it brings, and it's one of the therapeutic services Dr. Lauren Brammeier specializes in.
Don't wait if your teeth look shorter than they once did, you spot chips at the gumline, or you wake with a sore jaw. At Brammeier Family Dental we'll read the wear patterns, pin down the root cause, and tailor treatment that prevents further damage.
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