4.5 Article

Changes in jaw and neck muscle coactivation and coordination in patients with chronic painful TMD disk displacement with reduction during chewing

Journal

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 230, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.113267

Keywords

Temporomandibular disorder; Mastication; Electromyography; Time domain; Frequency domain

Funding

  1. Provost's Office for Research of the University of Sao Paulo [11.1.21626.01.7]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development - Brazilian Ministry of Science and Technology [30.8689/2016-0]
  3. Coordenacao de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES), Brazil [001]

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This study investigated the behavior of jaw and neck muscles during chewing in patients with chronic painful TMD-DDR using electromyographic (EMG) analysis. Patients with TMD showed longer chewing stroke duration, changes in coactivation and coordination strategies of jaw muscles, delays in peak and temporal asynchrony in jaw and neck muscles, as well as impaired differential recruitment and coherence compared to the control group. The study demonstrated specific changes in jaw and neck muscles during chewing in patients with chronic painful TMD-DDR, with a more compromised function observed in the jaw muscles.
The treatment of a complex temporomandibular disorder (TMD), such as disk displacement with reduction (DDR) associated with arthralgia and myalgia, may depends on understanding the impairments in muscle function. The aim of this study was to investigate the behavior of the anterior temporalis, masseter and sternocleidomastoid muscles in the time and frequency domains during chewing in patients with chronic painful TMD-DDR using electromyographic (EMG) analysis. Thirty-three patients who met the diagnostic criteria for TMD and 32 volunteers without TMD (control group) underwent clinical examination, chewing pattern classification and EMG analysis. For the EMG analyses, the side of habitual unilateral chewing, as determined by the chewing pattern classification, was selected for recording; in cases of bilateral chewing, the recording side was randomly selected. The EMG-EMG coherence function and EMG-EMG transfer function (gain and phase) values were obtained at the first chewing frequency peak, and the working-side masseter signal was used as a reference in the analyses of the other muscles. Compared to the control group, the TMD group showed a longer chewing stroke duration (P = 0.01) as well as changes in the coactivation and coordination strategies of the jaw muscles, evidenced by greater relative energy expenditure (P< 0.01) and impaired differential recruitment (P< 0.05) and coherence (P< 0.01). Delays in peak and temporal asynchrony occurred in the jaw and neck muscles (P< 0.05). Patients with chronic painful TMD-DDR during chewing presented changes in the jaw and neck muscles, with more compromised function of the former, which are specific to chewing.

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