Bennett Angle, Condylar and Jaw Movements in Asymptomatic Athletes with a History of a Blow to One Side of the Mandibula

Author:

Lešić Nikolina12,Seifert Davor12,Dragičević Dora1,Pul Luka1,Petrović Dorotea1,Čelebić Asja3ORCID,Pezo Hrvoje1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dental Medicine, Faculty of Dental Medicine and Health Osijek, J.J. Strossmayer University of Osijek, 31 000 Osijek, Croatia

2. Private Dental Practice Seifert d.o.o., Martićeva ulica 43, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia

3. School of Dental medicine, University of Zagreb, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia

Abstract

Sports activities may induce long-lasting changes in mandibular trajectories. The aim was to compare condylar and mandibular movements in athletes with orofacial injuries with values measured in non-injured athletes. The group of 132 athletes without mandibular injury included asymptomatic athletes with a history of a blow to the right side (N = 43) and the group included asymptomatic athletes with a history of a blow to the left side (N = 41) of the mandible. The injured athletes suffered from stiffness/pain and/or limitation of jaw movements. The symptoms disappeared shortly after the injury. Athletes with a history of injury have smaller mean values of Bennett angle on the side of impact, and Bennett angle on the opposite side is greater than the mean found in non-injured athletes. Significantly smaller Bennett angle values in athletes with a history of a blow to one side of the mandible are due to the adaptability of the orofacial system. The larger Bennett angle on the opposite side of the injury is also due to the adaptive mechanism of the TMJ. Clinical Relevance: An individualized approach to TMJ values is mandatory in restorative procedures in every patient, especially in patients with a history of trauma to the orofacial system.

Funder

Faculty of Dental Medicine and Health Osijek, J.J. Strossmayer University of Osijek

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Dentistry

Reference38 articles.

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