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Asaf Cygelberg

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  1. Hello, I had wisdom tooth removal in 2008, and felt pretty bad afterwards. It was my right and lower wisdom tooth. This lasted until... the present. And will surely continue until they are replaced with some implants, and then only hopefully. It took me several years, but in 2012 I realized the sharp change that came to my life started at the wisdom tooth removal, and quickly I came to the conclusion that the removal of the wisdom tooth must have changed something in the anatomy of the mouth, perhaps moving some muscle. It was odd, but my problems thinking, the agitation I felt, the problems moving the head and jaw, speaking and singing, ear popping in my right ear, changes to appearance and so on, all started with the wisdom tooth's removal, that was quite obvious, once I connected the two. I looked into the question of what anatomical parts might have changed from the wisdom tooth removal, to explain the changes to the way I felt, and found a few possible options, looking in anatomy illustrations and feeling in my mouth. It was in this year of 2022 that I made much progress, naming the masseter muscles as touching and resting on the wisdom teeth, both upper and lower. Before that I already named the pterygomandibular ligaments as interacting probably with the lower wisdom teeth, on their inside side. I am quite sure of this, especially the masseter muscle. I as well, this year, found an MRI image online, an axial MRI of the human skull from which you can see that the third molars and the masseter muscles have tissue between them, and no gaps, and so that if they are removed, the masseter muscles would be affected, losing support and "collapsing". The picture is attached to this post. As well, the picture shows that the buccal fat pads sit in the middle, between the buccinator muscles and the masseter muscles, and fill the gap, so to speak, between the wisdom teeth and the masseter muscles. I am interested in advancing the observations that wisdom tooth removal causes harm to function and that the interaction of the masseter muscle and the wisdom tooth is key to this. I as well, to prove and study the effects of wisdom tooth removal on people, made a list of about 100 celebrities who were reported to have had wisdom tooth removal, and listed whether they exhibited problems afterwards, and a large portion of them, probably higher than celebrities have in general, had substance abuse issues, mental health problems, erratic behavior and etc. All this information is on my website on the subject, asafcygelberg.neocities.org. I would like to have your thoughts and any interest from researchers in the field would be appreciated. I would like to publish this information. I think it's very important and interesting. There are perhaps billions of people walking around having had wisdom tooth removal and suffering from it, and many more are added everyday, and their suffering are unrecognized and untreated.
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