| Literature DB >> 35207380 |
Alessandro Nota1, Laura Pittari1, Martina Paggi1, Silvio Abati1, Simona Tecco1.
Abstract
Bruxism and gastroesophageal reflux (GERD) can lead to wear of the dental tissues. Wear has a mechanical or chemical origin, and it is of extrinsic or intrinsic type. Bruxism and GERD are two etiological factors of dental wear. The intrinsic mechanical wear (abfraction) of Bruxism and intrinsic chemical wear (erosion) of GERD are both involved in sleep disorders; indeed, they could have associations and act in synergy in dental wear. The purpose of this review was to find out the possible associations between bruxism and GERD and their effects on tooth wear. The research was conducted on PubMed and the Cochrane Library using the following Keywords/Mesh Terms: Tooth wear, Bruxism, Sleep Bruxism, Sleep Disorders, or GERD. Only systematic reviews and clinical studies performed exclusively on human subjects were included in the review. Initially, the research gave more than 630 results on dental wear, bruxism and GERD and after application of the inclusion criteria irrelevant studies were excluded, and 5 studies were finally included in this review. It was possible to observe the presence of some associations between the two problems (reflux and GERD) and hypothesize negative effects on tooth wear. This research revealed the presence of an interconnection between these three problems (reflux, GERD and tooth wear) that can further act in synergy by attacking the hard dental tissues both from a chemical (reflux) and mechanical (bruxism) point of view. The dentist could play a role of "sentinel" in a multidisciplinary team, intercepting these problems early in order to treat them in the most appropriate way. PROSPERO Registration Number: CRD42021234209.Entities:
Keywords: awake bruxism; enamel wear; gastroesophageal reflux; review; sleep bruxism; sleep disorders; tooth abrasion
Year: 2022 PMID: 35207380 PMCID: PMC8879082 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11041107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Research strategy.
| Research Strategy | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Bruxism |
| 2 | Sleep Bruxism |
| 3 | Sleep Disorders |
| 4 | Gastroesophageal Reflux |
| 5 | Tooth wear |
| Searches carried out | 1. (1 or 2 or 3 or 5) and 4: 811 |
Articles qualitative assessment.
| Authors | Article Type | Sample Selection Based on Age Group | Description of an Error Analysis Method | Full Description of the Technical Data | Description of the Blinding Procedure | Preliminary Estimate of the Sample Size | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Systematic review/case control: 3 | Total: 2 | Yes: 1 | Complete: 2 | Yes: 1 | Yes: 1 | ||
| 1. Yuanyuan Li et al. | 3 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 9 |
| 2. Yuanyuan Li et al. | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 10 |
| 3. Naila Aparecida de Godoi Machado et al. | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
| 4. Peter Wetselaar et al. | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6 |
| 5. Gilles J. Lavigne et al. | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
Figure 1Flow chart.
Summary of the results of the studies that analyzed the effects of bruxism and GERD synergy on tooth wear.
| Study | Variable 1 | Variable 2 | Univariate Analysis | Multivariable Analysis (1) | Multivariable Analysis (2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yuanyuan Li et al. | Bruxism | GERD | 7.95 (5.08–12.46), | 6.87 (4.34–10.88), | |
| (July 2018) | Bruxism | GERD + Male | 4.43 (2.46–7.99), | 3.81 (2.09–6.95), | 3.99 (2.17–7.32), |
| Bruxism | GERD + Female | 14.59 (7.02–30.33), | 12.27 (5.81–25.91), | ||
| Bruxism | Longer GERD duration (>2 years) | 1.44 (1.06–1.97), | 1.50 (1.10–2.05), | ||
| GERD | Awake Bruxism | 18.78 (7.91–44.60), | 13.06 (5.32–32.05), | ||
| Sleep Bruxism | 7.61 (4.83–11.98), | 6.71 (4.22–10.68), | |||
| Awake + Sleep Bruxism | 8.14 (3.93–16.87), | 6.48 (3.05–13.77), | |||
| Yuanyuan Li et al. |
|
| |||
| (November 2018) | Bruxism | GERD | 6.21 (3.36–11.46), | 5.30 (2.62–10.70), | 3.84 (1.86–7.95), |
| Bruxism | GERD (duration ≤ 5 years) | 4.15 (1.86–9.25), | 3.38 (1.38–8.24), | 2.49 (0.98–6.29), | |
| Bruxism | GERD (duration > 5 years) | 9.49 (3.70–24.36), | 8.73 (2.97–25.63), | 6.27 (2.07–18.97) | |
| Bruxism + GERD ≥ 5 years | Severe Tooth Wear | 5.11 (2.60–10.04), | 4.70 (2.04–10.83), | ||
| Bruxism + GERD ≤ 5 years | Palatal/Lingual Tooth Wear | 8.59 (1.94–38.04), | |||
| Bruxism + GERD > 5 years | Palatal/Lingual Tooth Wear | 15.19 (4.57–50.51), | |||
| Bruxism + GERD > 5 years | Occlusal/Incisal Tooth Wear | 4.86 (2.48–9.52), | |||
| Bruxism + GERD ≤ 5 years | Anterior Severe Tooth Wear | 3.10 (1.14–8.45), | |||
| Bruxism + GERD > 5 years | Anterior Severe Tooth Wear | 3.16 (1.37–7.32), | |||
| Posterior Severe Tooth Wear | 3.92 (1.69–9.05), | ||||
| Upper Severe Tooth Wear | 3.74 (1.63–8.58), | ||||
| Lower Severe Tooth Wear | 3.71 (1.60–8.61), |