Predicting masticatory muscle activity and deviations in mouth opening from non‐invasive temporomandibular joint complex functional analyses

Author:

Farook Taseef Hasan1ORCID,Haq Tashreque Mohammed1,Ramees Lameesa1,Dudley James1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Adelaide Dental School The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundA quantitative approach to predict expected muscle activity and mandibular movement from non‐invasive hard tissue assessments remains unexplored.ObjectivesThis study investigated the predictive potential of normalised muscle activity during various jaw movements combined with temporomandibular joint (TMJ) vibration analyses to predict expected maximum lateral deviation during mouth opening.MethodSixty‐six participants underwent electrognathography (EGN), surface electromyography (EMG) and joint vibration analyses (JVA). They performed maximum mouth opening, lateral excursion and anterior protrusion as jaw movement activities in a single session. Multiple predictive models were trained from synthetic observations generated from the 66 human observations. Muscle function intensity and activity duration were normalised and a decision support system with branching logic was developed to predict lateral deviation. Performance of the models in predicting temporalis, masseter and digastric muscle activity from hard tissue data was evaluated through root mean squared error (RMSE) and mean absolute error.ResultsTemporalis muscle intensity ranged from 0.135 ± 0.056, masseter from 0.111 ± 0.053 and digastric from 0.120 ± 0.051. Muscle activity duration varied with temporalis at 112.23 ± 126.81 ms, masseter at 101.02 ± 121.34 ms and digastric at 168.13 ± 222.82 ms. XGBoost predicted muscle intensity and activity duration and scored an RMSE of 0.03–0.05. Jaw deviations were successfully predicted with a MAE of 0.9 mm.ConclusionApplying deep learning to EGN, EMG and JVA data can establish a quantifiable relationship between muscles and hard tissue movement within the TMJ complex and can predict jaw deviations.

Funder

University of Adelaide

Publisher

Wiley

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