Correlates of jaw functional limitation, somatization and psychological distress among different temporomandibular disorder diagnostic subtypes

Author:

Yap Adrian Ujin12ORCID,Kim Sunghae34ORCID,Lee Byeong‐min5ORCID,Jo Jung Hwan56ORCID,Park Ji Woon356ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dentistry, Ng Teng Fong General Hospital and Faculty of Dentistry National University Health System Singapore Singapore

2. National Dental Research Institute Singapore, National Dental Centre Singapore and Duke‐NUS Medical School, Singapore Health Services Singapore Singapore

3. Dental Research Institute, Seoul National University Seoul Korea

4. Center for Future Dentistry Seoul National University School of Dentistry Seoul Korea

5. Department of Oral Medicine Seoul National University Dental Hospital Seoul Korea

6. Department of Oral Medicine & Oral Diagnosis Seoul National University School of Dentistry Seoul Korea

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThis study investigated the jaw functional status and severity of somatic/psychological symptoms in different Diagnostic Criteria for temporomandibular disorders (DC/TMD) diagnostic subtypes and established the correlates between jaw functional limitation, somatization, depression and anxiety.MethodsData were accrued from consecutive ‘first‐visit’ patients seeking TMD treatment at a university‐based oral medicine/diagnosis clinic. Axis I physical TMD diagnoses were derived using the DC/TMD methodology and patients were categorized into pain‐related (PT), intra‐articular (IT) and combined (CT) TMD groups. Axis II measures were also administered and included the Jaw Functional Limitation Scale‐20 (JFLS‐20), Patient Health Questionnaire‐15 and 9 (PHQ‐15 and PHQ‐9) and General Anxiety Disorder Scale‐7 (GAD‐7). Chi‐square/Kruskal–Wallis tests and Spearman's correlation were employed for statistical evaluations (α = .05).ResultsThe final dataset consisted of 772 TMD patients (mean age of 37.7 ± 15.9 years; 70.2% females). The prevalence of PT, IT and CT was 11.9%, 15.7% and 72.4%, respectively. Significant differences in functional jaw limitations, somatization, depression (CT, PT > IT) and anxiety (CT > PT, IT) were observed. Moderate‐to‐severe somatization, depression and anxiety were detected in 12.6%–15.7% of patients. For all three TMD groups, JFLS global scale/subscale scores were weakly associated with somatization, depression and anxiety scores (rs < 0.4). Moderate‐to‐strong correlations were noted between somatization, depression and anxiety (rs = 0.50–0.74).ConclusionsFunctional jaw limitations were associated with painful TMDs but appear to be unrelated to somatization and psychological distress. Somatization and depression/anxiety were moderately correlated, underscoring the importance of somatic symptom screening when managing TMD patients.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Dentistry

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