| Literature DB >> 24886985 |
Sasa Ilovar, Danaja Zolger, Eduardo Castrillon, Josip Car, Kit Huckvale1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bruxism is a disorder of jaw-muscle activity characterised by repetitive clenching or grinding of the teeth which results in discomfort and damage to dentition. The two clinical manifestations of the condition (sleep and awake bruxism) are thought to have unrelated aetiologies but are palliated using similar techniques. The lack of a definitive treatment has prompted renewed interest in biofeedback, a behaviour change method that uses electronic detection to provide a stimulus whenever bruxism occurs. This systematic review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the state of research into biofeedback for bruxism; to assess the efficacy and acceptability of biofeedback therapy in management of awake bruxism and, separately, sleep bruxism in adults; and to compare findings between the two variants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24886985 PMCID: PMC4028105 DOI: 10.1186/2046-4053-3-42
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Figure 1Schematic mode of action of biofeedback for bruxism.
Clinical and polysomnographic criteria for diagnosis of sleep bruxism
| The participant reports or is aware of tooth grinding or clenching during sleep (3–5 nights per week over past 6 months) and one or more of the following: | Polysomnographic monitoring demonstrates both of the following: jaw muscle activity during the sleep period and absence of associated epileptic activity. |
| Polysomnographic diagnostic cut-off criteria: | |
| - Abnormal tooth wear, | - More than four bruxism episodes per hour; |
| - Jaw muscle discomfort, fatigue or pain, and jaw lock upon awakening, | - More than six bruxism bursts per episode and/or 25 bruxism bursts per hour of sleep; and |
| - Masseter muscle hypertrophy evident on voluntary forceful clenching. | - At least two episodes with grinding sounds. |
Generic search strategy
| 1 | brux* | Search for any word with ‘brux’ as its stem. |
| 2 | *bruxism/OR *sleep bruxism/ | Search for the keywords or subject headings ‘bruxism’ or ‘sleep bruxism’. |
| 3 | 1 AND 2 |
Because of poorly defined and unstandardised terminology, we elected to use a simple, sensitivity- maximising search strategy.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Adults 18 or older | Children <18 |
| Clinical or EMG/PSG-based diagnosis of SB or clinical diagnosis of AB | Co-existing diagnosis of SB and AB (unlikely) |
| Co-existing diagnoses not affecting clinical management of bruxism | Known neurological or psychiatric comorbidities and/or a past history of receiving biofeedback therapy for bruxism |
| Biofeedback as an intervention for reducing or controlling bruxism | Relaxation therapy not linked to bruxism specifically |
| Any valid comparison (placebo, other intervention or biofeedback type) | Co-existing alternate therapy for bruxism in intervention group (complex intervention) |
| Any duration | Duration of active therapy not clear (or clarified by authors) |
| Outcomes reported at completion of active therapy and (optionally) at completion of follow-up | - |
| Any language | - |
| Published or unpublished work | - |
| | |
| Any study type that provides evidence about types of biofeedback, technical aspects of design and clinical use or safety issues. | - |
| | |
| Randomised or quasi-randomised control trials or randomised cross-over studies | Any other study design |
AB, awake bruxism; EMG, electromyograph; PSG, polysomnograph; SB, sleep bruxism.