| Literature DB >> 30425840 |
Magdalini Thymi1, Annemiek Rollman1, Corine M Visscher1, Daniel Wismeijer2, Frank Lobbezoo1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To explore how bruxism is dealt with by accredited oral implantologists within daily clinical practice.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30425840 PMCID: PMC6226535 DOI: 10.1038/s41405-018-0006-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BDJ Open ISSN: 2056-807X
Main domains included in topic guide
| Main domain | |
|---|---|
| 1. | Feasibility of, and experiences with implant dentistry in bruxing patients |
| 2. | Attitudes regarding the features of an implant treatment plan in bruxing patients |
| 3. | Attitudes regarding the diagnosis of bruxism in the clinic |
| 4. | Attitudes related to scientific research in the field of implant dentistry and bruxism |
Fig. 1Inclusion flowchart
Sample characteristics
| Total sample size | 9 |
| Male/female | 9/0 |
| Mean (range) years of practicing dentistry | 23 (10–31) |
| Mean (range) years of being an accredited oral implantologist | 10 (2–18) |
| Approximate number of implant-borne superstructures placed per year | 10–50: 1 participant, ≥50: 8 participants |
| Number of participants having followed postgraduate education in the field of oral implantology in the past 5 years | 9 |
| Number of participants having followed postgraduate education in the field of bruxism in the past 5 years | 6 |
Main themes, sub-themes, and summary of experiences and attitudes
|
|
| 1. General attitude about impact of bruxism on oral health |
| •Bruxism is damaging (wear, endodontic treatments, tooth loss, fractures, pain, or limitation of movement) |
| 2. Feasibility of implant dentistry in bruxers |
| •Positive attitude: implants are possible, bruxism is not a contraindication (unless there is pain, some precautions needed, it can even help distribute forces better, better than conventional porcelain) |
| 3. Encounters with complications |
| Variation in attitudes: |
| 4. Mechanism of complications |
| Bone loss/loss of osseointegration: |
| 5. Consequences and treatment of complications |
| •Chippings: usually not very troublesome, investigate cause |
|
|
| 1. Assessment of patients |
| •Thorough investigation of signs of function in every patient from the start of therapeutic trajectory |
| 2. Treatment features |
| •Occlusion, various views: only when biting hard in maximal occlusion, out of occlusion, can make contact, may be out of contact, check at preventive check-ups |
| 3. Communication with patients |
| •Discuss beforehand: risks/expectations, protection, FP out during sleep, written informed consent |
| 4. Role of general practitioners |
| •Important for longevity of implant-supported restorations |
| 5. Sources of information |
| •Literature, courses, undergraduate education |
|
|
| 1. Importance of diagnosing bruxism |
| •Very important, should be part of routine |
| 2. Diagnostic approaches |
| •Extraoral examination: shape of face/muscles, activity of jaw, general appearance/temper |
| 3. Challenges |
| •Uncertainty about diagnosis: |
|
|
| 1. Role of education |
| •Attention of general practitioners for occlusion and articulation, learn how to see signs of bruxism and take it into account during treatment planning |
| 2. Role of diagnostic approaches of bruxism |
| •It is important: treatment should be based on good diagnosis, improve compliance of wearing protective splint, difficult since bruxism can fluctuate, simple chair-side tool, device for home, referral clinic for extreme cases |
| 3. Role of treatment approaches of bruxism |
| •Does not seem to be an important issue for implantologists, but may be for dentistry in general |
| 4. Other issues |
| •Define who is a bruxer |