Force & stability.
when load determines what survives.
Force is invisible, but it determines what survives. Teeth rarely fail because they are weak. They fail because force concentrates on compromised structure.
In the Keep Your Teeth Framework, force and stability are evaluated as a system, not a symptom.
§ 01 · Use this page if
Who this is for.
§ 02 · Evaluation
How the KYT Framework evaluates force & stability.
Where is the tooth thin, restored, cracked, or previously weakened? Force exploits the weakest geometry.
Is load distributed across the arch, or concentrated on a few teeth? Are contacts balanced or overloaded?
Is this early instability that can be redirected, or late-stage fatigue that needs reinforcement?
If this force pattern continues for 5 to 20 years, what fails first: enamel, margins, cusps, implants, or the bite itself?
Why stability changes over time
Teeth are not static materials. With age, enamel thins, dentin fatigues, microfractures accumulate, and old restorations alter load pathways. Missing teeth can shift force forward and turn front teeth into load-bearing teeth. What looks stable at 35 may collapse at 65. Not because of one event, but because force compounds over time.
§ 03 · Applied scenarios
Applied force & stability.
Loose tooth: stabilize or extract?
A force and stability decision. When mobility can be stabilized, and when extraction becomes predictable.
ADHD and teeth grinding
A clinical overview of patterns we see, and what to watch for long term.
Open →Long-term bruxism damage
How forces accumulate: enamel loss, cracks, failure of restorations, and bite change.
Open →Why bite changes over time
Missing teeth, shifting contacts, and why stability matters before major work.
Open →Occlusal overload and failure
How overload creates failure patterns, even with high-quality materials.
Open →§ 04 · Related care at KYT
Related care at KYT.
§·Clarity first · Then decisions
Want to see how force & stability applies to your case?
A calm exam lets us look at your specific structure, force patterns, and timing before recommending anything irreversible. We explain what we see and what protects long-term stability.