Episode Details
Back to EpisodesWe All Have TWO Bites with Bobby Supple – PDP252
Description
Do your patients really have two bites?
Does their bite change when they lie down? When they sleep?
And how can you explain centric relation, posture, and deprogramming in a way that patients actually understand?
Dr. Bobby Supple joins Jaz for a powerful episode unpacking one of the most misunderstood topics in occlusion: the daytime chewing bite versus the nighttime airway bite. After spending days with Bobby in his New Mexico clinic, Jaz saw firsthand how simply and elegantly Bobby communicates concepts that usually leave patients — and dentists — confused.
Together, they explore why bite discrepancies exist, what happens when the condyles fully seat, and how aligning Bite One and Bite Two over time can transform patient comfort and restorative outcomes.
Protrusive Dental Pearl
- When assessing abfractions, always check the patient’s bite in two positions: seated upright and lying back.
- Posture subtly shifts the condylar position and can change how forces load the tooth.
Want more gems like this? AskJaz — your on-demand dental brain, will be soon baked right into the Protrusive App.
Key Takeaways:
- Every patient has two bites — their upright chewing bite and their horizontal airway bite.
- Posture changes the condylar position more than we realise.
- Clear communication can make complex occlusion concepts instantly understandable.
- Aligning Bite One and Bite Two over time leads to healthier joints and more predictable dentistry.
Highlights of this episode:
- 03:36 Pearl – Assessing Abfractions
- 06:47 Dr. Bobby Supple’s Journey to Dentistry
- 10:46 Confusion Around Centric Relation
- 13:22 Exploring T-Scan Technology
- 21:40 The Evolution of Digital Occlusion
- 27:05 Effect of Sitting vs. Reclined Position
- 32:03 Airway and Skeletal Asymmetry
- 37:19 Bite Philosophy and Treatment
- 42:10 Orthotics and Long-term Care
- 52:13 Preventive Dental Care
- 58:18 Ask Jaz AI (Beta Launch)
🎓 Join the world’s leading organization dedicated to occlusion, temporomandibular disorders (TMD), and restorative excellence — the American Equilibration Society (AES).
🗓️ AES Annual Meeting 2026 – “The Evolution of the Oral Physician”
📍 February 18–19, 2026 · Chicago, Illinois
Papers & Literature: Dr. Bobby’s Top Picks
Introduction to force scanning
Digital Occlusion–From paper marks to digital force mapping
Discover Dr. Robert Kerstein’s guide to Measured Digital Occlusion and T-Scan technology.
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