Lavigne G J, Rompré P H, Poirier G, Huard H, Kato T, Montplaisir J Y
Centre d'étude du sommeil, H pital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, Québec, Canada.
J Dent Res. 2001 Feb;80(2):443-8. doi: 10.1177/00220345010800020801.
Rhythmic Masticatory Muscle Activity (RMMA) is frequently observed during sleep in normal subjects and sleep bruxers. We hypothesized that some normal subjects exhibit RMMA at a lower frequency than sleep bruxers. Polysomnographic data from 82 normal subjects were compared with data from 33 sleep bruxers. RMMA episodes were defined as three or more consecutive bursts of masseter EMG activity, with or without tooth-grinding. Such episodes were observed in nearly 60% of normal subjects. A lower frequency of episodes was noted in normal subjects than in bruxers. Sleep organization was similar between groups. Bruxers had twice as many masseter muscle bursts per episode and episodes of higher amplitude compared with controls with RMMA. The high prevalence of RMMA observed in normal subjects suggests that this activity is related to certain sleep-related physiological functions, including autonomic activation.
在正常受试者和磨牙症患者睡眠期间,经常观察到节律性咀嚼肌活动(RMMA)。我们假设一些正常受试者表现出RMMA的频率低于磨牙症患者。将82名正常受试者的多导睡眠图数据与33名磨牙症患者的数据进行比较。RMMA发作被定义为咬肌肌电图活动连续三次或更多次爆发,无论是否伴有磨牙。在近60%的正常受试者中观察到此类发作。正常受试者的发作频率低于磨牙症患者。两组之间的睡眠结构相似。与有RMMA的对照组相比,磨牙症患者每次发作的咬肌肌肉爆发次数是对照组的两倍,且发作幅度更高。在正常受试者中观察到的RMMA的高发生率表明,这种活动与某些与睡眠相关的生理功能有关,包括自主神经激活。