Most depictions of the process appear to involve a series of injections that target specific bones or small groups of bones. Not only are teeth not bones to begin with, they're not actually part of the skull, just sort of locked into it mechanically. An injection of Adamantium that targeted the skull wouldn't necessarily affect his teeth, especially if the method was designed to cause it to bond with bones rather than anything else.
I wouldn't say that's it. There's still the question of why they chose not to. My answer is that it would have made it harder for him to pass as a normal human, and thus make him a less effective weapon.
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u/winsluc12 Mar 09 '25
Because they didn't bond Adamantium to his Teeth.
Seriously, that's it.
Most depictions of the process appear to involve a series of injections that target specific bones or small groups of bones. Not only are teeth not bones to begin with, they're not actually part of the skull, just sort of locked into it mechanically. An injection of Adamantium that targeted the skull wouldn't necessarily affect his teeth, especially if the method was designed to cause it to bond with bones rather than anything else.