Coombs Matthew C, She Xin, Brown Truman R, Slate Elizabeth H, Lee Janice S, Yao Hai
Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Bioengineering, Clemson University, Clemson, SC; and Department of Oral Health Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC.
Graduate Assistant, Department of Bioengineering, Clemson University, Clemson, SC.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2019 Nov;77(11):2245-2257. doi: 10.1016/j.joms.2019.04.022. Epub 2019 Apr 25.
Approximately 2 to 4% of the US population have been estimated to seek treatment for temporomandibular symptoms, predominately women. The study purpose was to determine whether sex-specific differences in temporomandibular morphometry result from scaling with sex differences in skull size and shape or intrinsic sex-specific differences.
A total of 22 (11 male [aged 74.5 ± 9.1 years]; 11 female [aged 73.6 ± 12.8 years]) human cadaveric heads with no history of temporomandibular disc derangement underwent cone beam computed tomography and high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging scanning to determine 3-dimensional cephalometric parameters and temporomandibular morphometric outcomes. Regression models between morphometric outcomes and cephalometric parameters were developed, and intrinsic sex-specific differences in temporomandibular morphometry normalized by cephalometric parameters were determined. Subject-specific finite element (FE) models of the extreme male and extreme female conditions were developed to predict variations in articular disc stress-strain under the same joint loading.
In some cases, sex differences in temporomandibular morphometric parameters could be explained by linear scaling with skull size and shape; however, scaling alone could not fully account for some differences between sexes, indicating intrinsic sex-specific differences. The intrinsic sex-specific differences in temporomandibular morphometry included an increased condylar medial length and mediolateral disc lengths in men and a longer anteroposterior disc length in women. Considering the extreme male and female temporomandibular morphometry observed in the present study, subject-specific FE models resulted in sex differences, with the extreme male joint having a broadly distributed stress field and peak stress of 5.28 MPa. The extreme female joint had a concentrated stress field and peak stress of 7.37 MPa.
Intrinsic sex-specific differences independent of scaling with donor skull size were identified in temporomandibular morphometry. Understanding intrinsic sex-specific morphometric differences is critical to determining the temporomandibular biomechanics given the effect of anatomy on joint contact mechanics and stress-strain distributions and requires further study as one potential factor for the increased predisposition of women to temporomandibular disc derangement.
据估计,美国约2%至4%的人口因颞下颌症状寻求治疗,其中女性占主导。本研究的目的是确定颞下颌形态测量中的性别差异是由与颅骨大小和形状的性别差异成比例缩放导致的,还是由内在的性别特异性差异导致的。
共有22个(11名男性[年龄74.5±9.1岁];11名女性[年龄73.6±12.8岁])无颞下颌关节盘紊乱病史的人类尸体头部接受了锥形束计算机断层扫描和高分辨率磁共振成像扫描,以确定三维头影测量参数和颞下颌形态测量结果。建立了形态测量结果与头影测量参数之间的回归模型,并确定了经头影测量参数标准化后的颞下颌形态测量中的内在性别特异性差异。开发了极端男性和极端女性条件下的个体特异性有限元(FE)模型,以预测在相同关节负荷下关节盘应力应变的变化。
在某些情况下,颞下颌形态测量参数的性别差异可以通过与颅骨大小和形状的线性缩放来解释;然而,仅缩放不能完全解释性别之间的一些差异,这表明存在内在的性别特异性差异。颞下颌形态测量中的内在性别特异性差异包括男性髁突内侧长度和关节盘内外侧长度增加,女性关节盘前后长度增加。考虑到本研究中观察到的极端男性和女性颞下颌形态测量结果,个体特异性FE模型导致了性别差异,极端男性关节的应力场分布广泛,峰值应力为5.28MPa。极端女性关节的应力场集中,峰值应力为7.37MPa。
在颞下颌形态测量中发现了与供体颅骨大小缩放无关的内在性别特异性差异。鉴于解剖结构对关节接触力学和应力应变分布的影响,了解内在的性别特异性形态测量差异对于确定颞下颌生物力学至关重要,并且作为女性颞下颌关节盘紊乱易感性增加的一个潜在因素需要进一步研究。