Willassen Lisa, Johansson Anders Arne, Kvinnsland Siv, Staniszewski Kordian, Berge Trond, Rosén Annika
Department of Clinical Dentistry, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway.
Pain Res Manag. 2020 Nov 12;2020:7893023. doi: 10.1155/2020/7893023. eCollection 2020.
Temporomandibular disorders (TMDs) are characterized by moderate to severe pain in the masticatory muscles and/or the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). The present study is a part of a multidisciplinary project, initiated by the Norwegian Ministry of Health. The main purpose of this study is to compare a cohort of TMD patients to healthy individuals regarding experimental pain, the degree of disability caused by living with pain and psychometric variables, and to investigate which of these variables is the best predictor for TMD patients. We hypothesised that TMD patients have more disability when living with pain and lower pain thresholds than healthy controls, and those psychometric variables are stronger predictors than pain thresholds provoked by experimental pain. Sixty TMD patients were matched by sex and age to sixty healthy individuals without TMD symptoms or other musculoskeletal symptoms in the head and neck region. All subjects completed a questionnaire that included psychometric characteristics, that is, a one- and two-item version of the Pain Catastrophizing Scale, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), and the Roland Morris Scale (RMS), which measures disability when living with pain. They also underwent a clinical examination including the measurement of pain thresholds with electrical and pressure stimuli. The TMD patients had lower pain thresholds for experimental electrical and pressure stimuli compared with the controls ( < 0.05 and <0.001, respectively). They also scored higher than healthy individuals with disability living with pain ( < 0.001), anxiety ( < 0.001), depression ( < 0.001), and catastrophizing ( < 0.001). The results for anxiety, depression, and catastrophizing have been published earlier, and the reused data in this study are compared with RMS and pain thresholds. The conditional logistic regression model identified catastrophizing (OR = 2.42, CI 1.22-4.79) as a significant predictor of TMD patients. The results support this hypothesis and indicate that TMD patients have lower pain thresholds and more disability when living with pain compared to healthy individuals, where the strongest prediction for TMD was catastrophizing. Awareness of psychometric disabilities in TMD patients is of importance when considering the choice of treatment.
颞下颌关节紊乱病(TMDs)的特征是咀嚼肌和/或颞下颌关节(TMJ)出现中度至重度疼痛。本研究是由挪威卫生部发起的一个多学科项目的一部分。本研究的主要目的是比较一组TMD患者与健康个体在实验性疼痛、疼痛导致的残疾程度以及心理测量变量方面的差异,并调查这些变量中哪一个是TMD患者的最佳预测指标。我们假设,与健康对照组相比,TMD患者在疼痛状态下有更多的残疾,且疼痛阈值更低,并且这些心理测量变量比实验性疼痛诱发的疼痛阈值更能预测TMD。60名TMD患者在性别和年龄上与60名没有TMD症状或头颈部其他肌肉骨骼症状的健康个体进行匹配。所有受试者都完成了一份问卷,其中包括心理测量特征,即疼痛灾难化量表的单项和两项版本、医院焦虑抑郁量表(HADS)以及罗兰·莫里斯量表(RMS),该量表用于测量疼痛状态下的残疾程度。他们还接受了临床检查,包括用电刺激和压力刺激测量疼痛阈值。与对照组相比,TMD患者对实验性电刺激和压力刺激的疼痛阈值更低(分别为<0.05和<0.001)。他们在疼痛状态下的残疾得分(<0.001)、焦虑得分(<0.001)、抑郁得分(<0.001)和灾难化得分(<0.001)也高于健康个体。焦虑、抑郁和灾难化的结果已在之前发表,本研究中重新使用的数据与RMS和疼痛阈值进行了比较。条件逻辑回归模型确定灾难化(OR = 2.42,CI 1.22 - 4.79)是TMD患者的一个重要预测指标。结果支持了这一假设,表明与健康个体相比,TMD患者在疼痛状态下疼痛阈值更低,残疾更多,其中对TMD最强的预测因素是灾难化。在考虑治疗选择时,了解TMD患者的心理测量残疾情况很重要。