Marbach J J, Raphael K G, Dohrenwend B P, Lennon M C
Public Health Division of Sociomedical Sciences, School of Public Health at Columbia University, New York.
J Am Dent Assoc. 1990 Mar;120(3):327-33. doi: 10.14219/jada.archive.1990.0051.
The current study explores the proposition that a treating clinician's etiologic model influences patients' reports of tooth grinding, the validity of, and subsequent research findings relying on these measures. The investigation compares self-reports of tooth grinding and related clinical variables for 151 cases of temporomandibular pain and dysfunction syndrome (TMPDS) treated by a clinician who does not explicitly support the grinding theory of the etiology of TMPDS, and 139 healthy controls. Cases were no more likely than well controls to report ever-grinding, but were actually significantly less likely than well controls to report current grinding. They were also significantly more likely to report that a dentist had told them they ground. Findings suggest that studies using self-report, clinician-report of tooth grinding (or both) are methodologically inadequate for addressing the relationship between tooth grinding and TMPDS.
本研究探讨了这样一个观点,即治疗临床医生的病因模型会影响患者关于磨牙的报告、这些测量方法的有效性以及依赖于这些测量方法的后续研究结果。该调查比较了151例颞下颌疼痛和功能障碍综合征(TMPDS)患者与139名健康对照者的磨牙自我报告及相关临床变量。这些TMPDS患者由一位不明确支持TMPDS病因的磨牙理论的临床医生进行治疗。病例组报告曾有磨牙经历的可能性并不比健康对照组更高,但实际上报告当前仍有磨牙的可能性显著低于健康对照组。他们也显著更有可能报告牙医曾告知他们有磨牙情况。研究结果表明,使用自我报告、临床医生关于磨牙的报告(或两者皆用)的研究在方法上不足以解决磨牙与TMPDS之间的关系。