4.7 Article

Longitudinal Multilevel Modeling of Facial Pain, Muscle Tension, and Stress

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 95, Issue 4, Pages 416-422

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0022034515625216

Keywords

temporomandibular; experience sampling; parafunctions; distress; masticatory muscles; therapeutics

Funding

  1. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [DE13563]
  2. University of Missouri-Kansas City
  3. Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences

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The role of masticatory muscle activation on pain in temporomandibular muscle and joint disorders (TMJD) is controversial. This single-group, prospective panel study examined the relationships among masticatory muscle tension, emotional distress, and TMJD pain in a sample of 7,023 observations obtained from 171 individuals using longitudinal multilevel modeling. Three main hypotheses were tested. The first posited that emotional distress and muscle tension directly influenced pain (hypothesis 1a: Distress TMJD Pain; hypothesis 1b: Muscle Tension TMJD Pain). The second posited that emotional distress directly influenced muscle tension (Distress Muscle Tension), and the third posited that the effect of emotional distress on pain was mediated by muscle tension (Distress Muscle Tension TMJD pain). We also examined the fit of the data to possible alternative models. All the data used in this study were collected via an experience sampling methodology. The fit of the preferred models was better than that of the alternative models, with the preferred models explaining large proportions of the data, especially for level 2 variance (hypothesis 1a = 41% variance; hypothesis 1b = 69% variance; hypothesis 2 = 48% variance). In the mediation model, the addition of muscle tension to the model reduced the impact of emotional distress. The findings support a causal role for masticatory muscle tension in TMJD pain. Clinically, the results suggest that addressing tension and other oral parafunctions in those diagnosed with TMJDs should be an important part of the conservative, noninvasive care of individuals diagnosed with the myofascial pain or arthralgia of TMJD.

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