Literature DB >> 21296641

Clenching occurring during the day is influenced by psychological factors.

Hiroshi Endo1, Kiyotaka Kanemura, Norimasa Tanabe, Jun Takebe.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: We investigated the relationship between clenching occurring during the day under natural conditions and psychological attributes.
METHOD: Subjects were 37 dentistry students and staff (14 women, 23 men; mean age 27.4±4.7 years). A portable EMG recording device was used to record muscle activity in the temporal muscles for a continuous 5-h period under subjects' natural conditions, including having lunch. Clenching was identified by electromyography, and subjects were categorized into clenching and non-clenching groups. Psychological testing was performed during the same period using the Modified Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale (MAS), the Self-rating Depression Scale (SDS), and the Cornell Medical Index (CMI), and the psychological attributes of clenching and non-clenching groups were compared.
RESULTS: Of the 37 subjects, 23 were assigned to the clenching group and 14 to the non-clenching group. Thirteen of the 23 subjects of the clenching group and none of the 14 subjects of the non-clenching group were determined to have psychological problems according to the MAS, with a significant difference observed between the clenching and non-clenching groups in terms of anxious tendency (p<0.001; Fisher's exact test). Total muscle activity in the clenching group, excluding eating and talking, was 3.5 times greater compared with the non-clenching group, and a significant difference between the groups was observed (p<0.05; Mann-Whitney U-test).
CONCLUSIONS: Daytime clenching was shown to be associated with anxious tendency. Total muscle activity in the clenching group was 3.5 times greater compared with the non-clenching group.
Copyright © 2010 Japan Prosthodontic Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21296641     DOI: 10.1016/j.jpor.2010.11.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Prosthodont Res        ISSN: 1883-1958            Impact factor:   4.642


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