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Quintessence Publishing: Journals: JOP
Journal of Orofacial Pain

Edited by Barry J. Sessle, BDS, MDS, BSc, PhD, FRSC

Official Journal of the American Academy of Orofacial Pain,
and the European, Australian, Asian, and Ibero-Latin Academies of Craniomandibular Disorders

ISSN 1064-6655

Publication:
Fall 2010
Volume 24 , Issue 4

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Temporomandibular Disorder Patients’ Illness Beliefs and Self-efficacy Related to Bruxism

Marylee J. van der Meulen, MSc/Richard Ohrbach, DDS, PhD/Irene H.A. Aartman, PhD/Machiel Naeije, PhD/Frank Lobbezoo, DDS, PhD

Pages: 367–372
PMID: 21197508

Aims: To examine temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients’ illness beliefs and self-efficacy in relation to bruxism, and to examine whether these beliefs are related to the severity of patients’ self-perceived bruxing behavior. Methods: A total of 504 TMD patients (75% women; mean age ± SD: 40.7 ± 14.6 years), referred to the TMD Clinic of the Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam, completed a battery of questionnaires, of which one inquired about the frequency of oral parafunctional behaviors, including bruxism (clenching and grinding). Patients’ illness beliefs were assessed with a question about the perceived causal relationship between bruxism and TMD pain; patients’ self-efficacy was assessed with questions about the general possibility of reducing oral parafunctional behaviors and patients’ own appraisal of their capability to accomplish this. Results: Sleep bruxism or awake bruxism was attributed by 66.7% and 53.8% of the patients, respectively, as a cause of TMD pain; 89.9% believed that oral parafunctions could be reduced, and 92.5% believed themselves capable of doing so. The higher a patient’s bruxism frequency, the more bruxism was believed to be the cause of TMD pain (Spearman’s rho 0.77 and 0.71, P < .001) and the more pessimistic the self-efficacy beliefs were about the reducibility of oral parafunctions (Kruskal-Wallis χ2 = 19.91, df = 2, P < .001; and Kruskal Wallis χ2 = 7.15, df = 2, P = .028). Conclusion: Most TMD patients believe in the harmfulness of bruxism and the possibility of reducing this behavior. Bruxism frequency is associated with illness beliefs and self-efficacy. J OROFAC PAIN 2010;24:367–372

Key words: bruxism, illness beliefs, oral parafunctions, self-efficacy, temporomandibular disorders

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