Self-assessed bruxism and phobic symptomatology

Minerva Stomatol. 2011 Mar;60(3):93-103.

Abstract

Aim: The aim of this observational study was to compare two samples of patients (identified, from a previous survey carried out in 2007, as self-assessed bruxers and not) on the basis of the presence of anxious/phobic symptoms, general and linked to an oral surgery.

Methods: Forty-three bruxers and 207 non-bruxers were identified; among these last ones a sub-sample of 89 subjects was randomly selected as control and analyzed. The instruments for data collecting were two self-administered psychological questionnaires: STAI-Y1, Phobia Scale by Marks-Sheehan, and supplementary items on specific dental fear/phobia.

Results: No significant differences were observed for age, gender and occupation data but interestingly bruxers are significantly more represented among widows/divorced and graduated in comparisons with non-bruxers. Alcohol consumers were more frequent in bruxers than in non-bruxers (55.8% and 12.4%, respectively; P=0.0001). Global anxiety (P=0.02), agoraphobia, claustrophobia, pathophobia, social phobia (P<0.05), are more frequent in bruxers as also a suffocation feeling (P=0.02). The severity of behaviours that aim to avoid the same situations that causes phobias is low and similar in the two groups.

Conclusion: The involuntary habit of clenching is, in our opinion, reported by the patients who control their anxiety/phobias without avoiding behaviours, increasing the muscular activity at a level relevant to bruxism.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Bruxism / complications
  • Bruxism / diagnosis*
  • Child
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Diagnostic Self Evaluation*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Phobic Disorders / etiology
  • Young Adult