| Literature DB >> 34307651 |
Ricardo Luiz de Barreto Aranha1, Renata de Castro Martins2, Diego Rodrigues de Aguilar2, Johana Alejandra Moreno-Drada1, Woosung Sohn3, Carolina de Castro Martins4, Mauro Henrique Nogueira Guimarães de Abreu2.
Abstract
Temporomandibular disorders (TMD) have been traditionally associated with psychosocial factors; however, occupational stress as a factor related to TMD has not been adequately assessed in the literature. The aim was to investigate the association between stress at work and TMD on adult paid workers. An electronic search included PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Embase, and LILACS databases. Manual searches in the included articles' reference and gray literature were performed. There were no restrictions regarding language or publication period. The inclusion criteria comprised observational studies with paid workers of any category, of both sexes, above 18 years old, assessing occupational stress/stress or distress and TMD as diagnosis or isolated signs and symptoms. Methodological quality was evaluated using Joanna Briggs tools. We narratively assessed the evidence using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach. We collected 12 studies. 50% reported a positive association between stress and TMD diagnostic across various job categories. On the other hand, TMJ sounds (a TMD sign) and work stress were associated only in a musicians' population. However, the shortage of eligible articles and the methodological limitations provided a very low certainty of the evidence; only 4 of the studies used validated tools for both stress and TMD (2 reporting positive association). The association between stress and TMD is inconclusive by the available data. In the future, we expect more robust epidemiologic studies addressing these relevant aspects.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34307651 PMCID: PMC8249225 DOI: 10.1155/2021/2055513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Flowchart showing the criteria of article search and selection (adapted from PRISMA).
Main descriptive features of selected studies (n = 12).
| Author, year, country | Sample size (final) | Group 1 ( | Group 2 ( | Group 3 ( | Group 4 ( | Group 5 ( | Stress: diagnostic tools, validation | TMD: diagnostic tools, validation | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rantala et al., 2003, Finland | 1339 | Employees of a Finnish Broadcasting Company with low perceived stress (1020/76%) | Employees of a Finnish Broadcasting Company with high perceived stress (316/24%) | Occupational Stress Questionnaire (OSQ); it is not possible to check the validity of the stress scale. | TMD painless symptoms scale; it was not possible to evaluate the diagnosis validity. | High perceived stress group (50 TMJ-related painless symptoms out of 316) | There was an association between stress and TMJ symptoms. | |||
| Nishiyama et al., 2012, Japan | 2203 | Electronic industry workers without TMD (1841/84%) | Electronic industry workers with TMD (362/16%) | Items 5–8 for psychosocial factors, including stress; variable is not validated. | Four-item questionnaire screening for patients with TMD-related symptoms (TRS); validated diagnosis. | Stress level and TMD were not associated after logistic regression analysis. No odds ratio was presented for the association between stress level and TMD. | There was no association between stress level and TMD. | |||
| Emodi Perelman et al., 2015, Israel | 140 | General occupation group (48/34%) | Dentists (44/32%) | High-tech workers (48/34%) | Self-reported stress at work; variable is not validated. | Full axis I exam and diagnosis according to the RDC/TMD for myofascial pain; validated diagnosis. | Higher stress at work (chi-square test; | High-tech workers and dentists were more prone to have stress and TMD. | ||
| Saruhanoğlu et al., 2016, Turkey | 124 | Workers from call centers with low stress (14/11%) | Workers from call centers with medium stress (33/27%) | Workers from call centers with high stress (77/62%) | The stress level of the job; variable is not validated. | Questionnaire from the RDC/TMD, axis 2. The diagnosis is validated. | Frequency of gradual mouth opening (chi-square test; | There was no relation between TMD signs and symptoms and stress in call center employees. | ||
| Martins et al., 2016, Brazil | 104 | Industrial workers with less stress (98/94%) | Industrial workers with more stress (6/6%) | Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS); variable is validated. | Fonseca Anamnesis Index; outcome is validated. | There were 34 workers with TMD out of 98 with less stress and 3 workers with TMD among 6 with high stress levels (Fisher exact test, | There was no association between stress and TMD. | |||
| Amorim and Jorge et al., 2016, Portugal | 93 | Violinists least anxious/stressed (46/49%) | Violinists most anxious/stressed (47/51%) | Kenny Music Performance Anxiety Inventory for anxiety and psychological distress; variable is validated. | Fonseca Anamnestic Questionnaire; the outcome is validated. | Music performance anxiety was associated with TMD scores (OR = 6.03; 95% CI 2.51–15.33) in the final logistic regression model. | Anxiety and distress were associated with TMD. | |||
| Amalina et al., 2018, Indonesia | 92 | Nurses without TMD (37/40%) | Nurses with TMD (55/60%) | Expanded Nursing Stress Scale (ENSS); variable is validated. | ID-TMD questionnaire, from RDC/TMD; the outcome is validated. | There was no association between TMD and the scores of ENSS: death and dying (Mann–Whitney | TMD was not associated with work stress among nurses in a type C Indonesian private hospital. | |||
| Gayathri et al., 2018, India | 153 | Software companies and IT professionals without stress (46/30%) | Software companies and IT professionals with stress (107/70%) | A self-administered online questionnaire for general stress symptoms; variable is not validated. | Self-admin. online questionnaire for TMD signs/symptom; outcome is not validated. | Stress level and TMD (Pearson's chi-square test; | There was an association between stress and TMD. | |||
| Han et al., 2018, South Korea | 1612 | Full-time female workers with low stress (1049/65%) | Full-time female workers with high stress (563/35%) | Self-reported stress; the variable is not validated. | TMD screening questions according to American Academy of Orofacial Pain (AAOP) and RDC/TMD; the outcome is validated. | There were 108 workers with TMD out of 1049 with less stress and 99 workers with TMD among 563 with high stress levels (chi-square test, | There was an association between high stress and TMD among female workers. | |||
| Van Selms et al., 2019, Netherlands | 515 | Amateur/semiprofessional musicians for whom loading of the masticatory system is not required (209/40%) | Amateur/semiprofessional vocalists (306/60%) | A single question about the overall amount of stress experienced during the last 30 days (NRS 0-10); variable is not validated. | Symptom Questionnaire (SQ) of the DC/TMD; validated diagnosis. | No association in the final multiple regression model for both TMD pain and TMJ sounds. No odds ratios were presented for the association between stress level and TMD and TMJ sounds. | Stress level was not associated with both TMD pain and TMJ sounds. | |||
| Tay et al., 2019, Singapore | 2043 | Asian military personnel without TMD (1301/64%) | Asian military personnel with TMD (742/36%) | Stress subscale of DASS-21; variable is validated. | Symptom Questionnaire (SQ) of the DC/TMD; outcome is validated. | The mean values of DASS-21 stress subscale scores were 1.95 (SD = 2.85) and 3.29 (SD = 3.82) among those without and with TMD, respectively (Mann–Whitney | There was an association between stress and TMD. | |||
| Van Selms et al., 2020, Netherlands | 1461 | Control: other instrumentalists (208/15%) | Woodwind (371/25%) | Brass (300/20%) | Upper strings instrumentalists (276/19%) | Vocalists (306/21%) | Single question: “how much stress did you experience in daily life during the last 30 days?” | Symptom Questionnaire (SQ) of DC/TMD; the outcome is validated. | No association in the final multiple regression model for TMD pain. There is an association between TMJ sounds and stress (OR 1.09; 95% CI 1.02-1.16; | There was an association between TMJ sounds and performance stress. |
The analysis of certainty of the evidence. Imported from GRADEpro Guideline Development Tool (GDT) (https://gdt.gradepro.org/app/#projects).
| Certainty assessment | Impact | Certainty | Importance | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | |||
| 12 | Observational studies | Very seriousa | Very seriousb | Very seriousc | Not serious | Publication bias strongly suspectedd | Seven studies found an association between stress and DTM or TMD signs and symptoms, and five studies found no association. | ⨁◯◯◯ | |
CI: confidence interval. aTwelve studies did not adjust for the confounders. Observational studies are at risk of bias because of differences in prognosis in exposed and unexposed populations (Guyatt et al., 2011//guidelines 4). bThere was great heterogeneity of instruments used for stress and TMD: 7 out of 12 studies used nonvalidated scales for stress (Nishiyama et al., 2012; Perelman et al., 2015; Saruhanoğlu et al., 2016; Han et al., 2018; M G et al., 2018; van Selms et al., 2019; van Selms et al., 2020) and 2 for TMD (Rantala et al., 2003; M G et al., 2018). Overall, only 3 articles employed valid instruments for both stress and TMD (Tay et al., 2019; Amorim and Jorge, 2016; Amalina et al., 2018). There was inconsistency among study findings: seven of selected articles found an association between TMD or TMD signs and symptoms and stress (Rantala et al., 2003; Perelman et al., 2015; Amorim and Jorge, 2016; Han et al., 2018; M G et al., 2018; Tay et al., 2019; van Selms et al., 2020), and 5 did not find an association (Nishiyama et al., 2012; Martins et al., 2016; Amalina et al., 2018; van Selms et al., 2019; van Selms et al., 2020). cThe evidence is from some types of categories of workers, with limited applicability to all workers. The majority of the evidence is from studies that evaluated stress in general, but not work stress (considered in only two studies: Amorim and Jorge (2016) and Amalina et al. (2018)). dObservational studies are more prone to publication bias than RCTs or clinical trials due to the nonmandatory registration in databases (Guyatt et al., 2011/guidelines 5).