| Literature DB >> 32685098 |
Alin Ciobica1, Manuela Padurariu2, Alexandrina Curpan3, Iulia Antioch1, Roxana Chirita2, Cristinel Stefanescu2, Alina-Costina Luca2, Mihoko Tomida4.
Abstract
Although the connections between neuropsychiatric and dental disorders attracted the attention of some research groups for more than 50 years now, there is a general opinion in the literature that it remains a clearly understudied and underrated topic, with many unknowns and a multitude of challenges for the specialists working in both these areas of research. In this way, considering the previous experience of our groups in these individual matters which are combined here, we are summarizing in this minireport the current status of knowledge on the connections between neuropsychiatric and dental manifestations, as well as some general ideas on how oxidative stress, pain, music therapy or even irritable bowel syndrome-related manifestations could be relevant in this current context and summarize some current approaches in this matter.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32685098 PMCID: PMC7345607 DOI: 10.1155/2020/6702314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1The timeline from 1955 to 2020 of the search count by using the keywords dental and psychiatry. There has been observed a significant increase of interest in these fields illustrated by the trendline with the highest search count till now recorded in 2019-297 entries.
Different symptomatologies and their consequences/manifestations influenced by different risk factors with an accent on the correlation between various psychiatric and dental disorders, highlighting the possible comorbidity between these 2 areas based on several research articles, reviews, clinical trials, and case reports.
| Manifestation/symptomatology | Risk factors | Consequences/correlations | Study type | Sample size | Specificity | Other observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Depressive symptomatology | Not under treatment | Favorable environment for caries because of a decreased salivary flow | Double-bind trazodone + imipramine+ placebo, parallel group design [ | 379 patients (142 trazodone, 142 imipramine—positive control, 95 placebo) [ | Tricyclic and heterocyclic antidepressants [ | The high incidence of certain side effects even in the placebo groups might have a connection with the neurotic symptomatology [ |
| Undertreatment (tricyclic and heterocyclic categories) | Influences salivary flow [ | |||||
| High levels of prostaglandins (found in salivary products) | Atypical face pain, odontalgia, burning mouth syndrome, lupus erythematosus, general disorders of taste and salivation [ | Affected hygiene and tobacco-associated usage | ||||
| Severe depression acutizations | Atypical face pain and/or facial arthromyalgia [ | Two centre double blind clinical trial [ | 93 patients at the actual start of the patient [ | No psychotic treatment for two weeks prior to the study [ | Out of the 53 patients considered as “psychiatric cases” due to their symptomatology, only 17 were still classified as such at the end of the nine weeks study (51) | |
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| 2 Anxiety | Bruxism (tooth grinding) | TMJD∗, recurrent stomatitis or lichen planus [ | ||||
| Phobias | Increased presence of decayed teeth recorded by DMFT∗ and DMFS∗ indexes, increased tooth loss [ | |||||
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| 3 Mildest dental irregularities | Psychological and psychiatric disturbances (anxiety manifestations) | Very disproportionate distress and depressive-social withdrawal, isolation and reduced self-esteem [ | ||||
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| 4 Addiction on drugs and/or alcohol | Excessive bruxism (tooth grinding and toxic habits) | ↑ Risk of oral cancers [ | Clinical trial [ | 28 subjects divided in 3 groups based on the unstimulated saliva flow rate [ | 18 subjects were taking medication knows to provoke xerostomia [ | |
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| 5 Traumatic and stressful events in the dental clinic | PTSD∗ manifestation [ | |||||
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| 6 Bipolar disorder | Excessive tooth brushing and/or flossing | Affected mucosa or deficits at teeth cervical/gingival levels [ | ||||
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| 7 Schizophrenia | Up to 50% reduced attendance to dental professionals | ↑ Tendency to develop TMD∗ [ | Clinical trial [ | 77 psychiatric patients under treatment with mostly dopamine antagonists + 50 healthy individuals as control [ | Psychiatric and/or schizophrenic patients + healthy controls | Lack of pain complaints suspected to be an ubiquitous dulling reply to pain connected with blunted replies that they present also to pleasure and basic emotions [ |
| Hypoalgesia | ||||||
| Auditory manifestations of the stomatognathic deficiency (such as ear fulness, hearing loss perception, and tinnitus) | ||||||
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| 8 Psychiatric patients | Increased consumption of sugary and carbonated drinks [ | Creating a favorable environment for caries occurrence | Cross-sectional population-based survey [ | 7305 adolescents [ | Strong correlation between soft drinks consumption and mental distress [ | |
∗BMS: burning mouth syndrome; ∗TMJD: temporomandibular joint dysfunction; ∗DMFT: decayed, missing, or filled teeth; ∗DMFS: decayed, missing, or filled surfaces; ∗PTSD: posttraumatic stress disorder; ∗TMD; temporomandibular disorders.