Prevalence of temporomandibular disorders and their associated factors in Confucian heritage cultures: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Yap Adrian Ujin12ORCID,Lai Ye Choung1ORCID,Ho Henry Chee Wai1ORCID

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

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundTemporomandibular disorders (TMDs) may be an ‘idiom’ of psychological distress in Confucian heritage cultures (CHCs).ObjectivesThis systematic review/meta‐analysis estimated the prevalence of TMDs in CHCs and compared the differences in TMD occurrence between time periods and age groups. Additionally, the associated biopsychosocial risk factors were also examined.MethodsThe study protocol was developed a priori following the PRISMA guidelines and Joanna Briggs Institute systematic review methodology (CRD42021245526). Electronic searches of seven databases were conducted from January 2002 to Dec 2021. Reference lists of identified studies were hand‐searched for additional articles. Study selection, quality assessment, and data extraction were done. Meta‐analysis was performed using the RevMan 5.4 software.ResultsForty‐eight articles were included in the systematic review. Overall prevalences were: TMDs‐15% (95% CI: 15–16%); TMD pain‐8% (95% CI: 7–9%); TMJ sounds‐24% (95% CI: 21–27%); and TMJ locking‐7% (95% CI: 1–13%). While TMD prevalence appeared to have declined from 2002 to 2011 to 2012–2021, the occurrence of TMD pain, TMJ sounds, and locking increased marginally or remained constant. TMD prevalence in children/adolescents was 18% (95% CI: 14–22%) and 17% (95% CI: 16–18%) among adults. Significant associations between TMDs and bruxism/psychological distress/education levels were specified by 73%/90%/88% of the relevant studies.ConclusionsTMDs are prevalent in CHCs and a slight increase in TMD pain (2%) and TMJ sounds (8%) were discerned over the past two decades. TMDs are related to a myriad of biopsychosocial variables, particularly psychological distress, and these factors must be addressed within the cultural context of patients.

Publisher

Wiley

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