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The challenge of ecological validity in temporomandibular disorders research. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The objective of the review is to evaluate how well current research on temporomandibular disorders (TMDs), particularly chronic myofascial pain and early onset degenerative TMJ disease, applies to real-world situations.
  • The study examined existing methods related to TMD research, focusing on muscle behavior, neuromechanics, and the autonomic nervous system, while highlighting the need for more relevant sampling and data analysis techniques.
  • Results indicate that recent findings challenge previous beliefs about the link between muscle clenching and TMD pain, suggesting that personalized assessments based on biological rhythms are necessary for effective treatment interventions.

Article Abstract

Objective: To review the ecological validity of outcomes from current research involving temporomandibular disorders (TMDs), with an emphasis on chronic myofascial pain and the precocious development of degenerative disease of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ).

Materials And Methods: Current approaches used to study TMDs in terms of neuromechanics, masticatory muscle behaviours, and the dynamics of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) were assessed for ecological validity in this review. In particular, the available literature was scrutinized regarding the effects of sampling, environmental and psychophysiological constraints and averaging data across biological rhythms.

Results: Validated computer-assisted numerical modelling of the neuromechanics used biological objective functions to accurately predict muscle activation patterns for jaw-loading tasks that were individual-specific. With respect to masticatory muscle behaviour, current findings refute the premise that sustained bruxing and clenching at high jaw-loading magnitudes were associated with painful TMDs such as myofascial pain. Concerning the role of the ANS in TMDs, there remains the need for personalized assessments based on biorhythms, and where the detection of dysregulated physiologic oscillators may inform interventions to relieve pain and restore normal function.

Conclusions: Future human research which focuses on TMD myofascial pain or the precocious development and progression of TMJ degenerative joint disease requires experimental designs with ecological validity that capture objectively measured data which meaningfully reflect circadian and ultradian states.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/joor.13707DOI Listing

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