Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3042824 Clinical Neurophysiology 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Patients with sleep bruxism show abnormal tremor of the jaw during a visually-guided bite force task.•The magnitude of ∼8 Hz jaw tremor and its modulation by dynamic bite force production separated patients from controls.•The spectral characteristics of force tremor and masseter EMG activity suggest that bruxism is marked by abnormal or mishandled periodontal feedback.

ObjectiveTo determine if sleep bruxism is associated with abnormal physiological tremor of the jaw during a visually-guided bite force control task.MethodsHealthy participants and patients with sleep bruxism were given visual feedback of their bite force and asked to trace triangular target trajectories (duration = 20 s, peak force <35% maximum voluntary force). Bite force control was quantified in terms of the power spectra of force fluctuations, masseter EMG activity, and force-to-EMG coherence.ResultsPatients had greater jaw force tremor at ∼8 Hz relative to controls, along with increased masseter EMG activity and force-to-EMG coherence in the same frequency range. Patients also showed lower force-to-EMG coherence at low frequencies (<3 Hz), but greater coherence at high frequencies (20–40 Hz). Finally, patients had greater 6–10 Hz force tremor during periods of descending vs. ascending force, while controls showed no difference in tremor with respect to force dynamics.ConclusionPatients with bruxism have abnormal jaw tremor when engaged in a visually-guided bite force task.SignificanceMeasurement of jaw tremor may aid in the detection/evaluation of bruxism. In light of previous literature, our results also suggest that bruxism is marked by abnormal or mishandled peripheral feedback from the teeth.

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