| Literature DB >> 22953526 |
Scott E Schames1, Joseph Schames, Mayer Schames, Susan S Chagall-Gungur.
Abstract
Sleep bruxism, an intensified manifestation of rhythmic masticatory muscle activity, characterized by tooth grinding or clenching during sleep, lacks a definitive physiological purpose. This paper posits that physiologically, sleep bruxism is an autonomic self-regulatory response to nighttime occurrences of tachycardia stemming from the brain experiencing microarousals during sleep. Sleep bruxism by triggering the trigeminal cardiac reflex leads to bradycardia. Rhythmic masticatory muscle activity-sleep bruxism, thereby, serves to slow the heart rate when brain microarousals cause tachycardia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22953526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Calif Dent Assoc ISSN: 1043-2256