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Psychological Factors Associated With Development of TMD: The OPPERA Prospective Cohort Study

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TLDR
Evidence is provided that measures of psychological functioning can predict first onset of TMD, and several premorbid psychological variables predict first-onset TMD in the OPPERA study, a large prospective cohort study designed to discover causal determinants of T MD pain.
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This article is published in The Journal of Pain.The article was published on 2013-12-01 and is currently open access. It has received 312 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Chronic pain.

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Citations
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Association of temporomandibular disorders severity with otologic and concomitant pain symptoms in Asian youths.

TL;DR: Otologic and concomitant pain symptoms were associated with TMDs and appear to increase with progressive TMD severity.
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DEEP Study: Utility of the multidimensional pain inventory in persistent oro-facial pain.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the West Haven-Yale Multidimensional Pain Inventory (MPI) to predict clinical outcome in patients with persistent oro-facial pain (POFP) across primary and secondary care settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Masticatory Myofascial Pain Disorders.

TL;DR: In this article , a complex case exhibiting common characteristics of MMPD was described, and the authors reviewed the literature on classification, pathophysiology, and evidence-based treatment planning.

Towards a Better Understanding of Temporomandibular Disorder

Jessica R Cox
TL;DR: It is proposed that this model that involves pain signaling in response to prolonged jaw opening in sensitized animals involves dysfunction of descending inhibitory signaling and likely involves changes in the expression of cytokines and miRNAs.
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Analysis of Portuguese Physiotherapists’ Self-Knowledge on Temporomandibular Disorders

TL;DR: In this article , a study aimed to characterize and analyze the self-knowledge of temporomandibular disorders (TMD) of Portuguese physiotherapists and showed that it is necessary to integrate TMD-related content into the basic training of physiotherapy and promote an increase in evidence-based training.
References
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Q1. What are the contributions in "Psychological factors associated with development of tmd: the oppera prospective cohort study" ?

For this study, 3,263 TMD-free participants completed a battery of psychological instruments assessing general psychological adjustment and personality, affective distress, psychosocial stress, somatic symptoms, and pain coping and catastrophizing. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to their customers the authors are providing this early version of the manuscript. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. 

The second stage of the analysis involved a series of multivariable Cox regression models in which the entered psychological variables were derived from a principal component analysis (PCA), which was performed in order to reduce the number of psychological variables by identifying putative latent constructs. 

in univariate analyses as well as both multivariable approaches the somatic symptom construct represented the strongest predictor of TMD onset, suggesting convergence of findings regarding somatic symptoms across analytic methods. 

The Stress and Negative Affectivity component was a weakly significant predictor in the unimputed analysis, but did not significantly predict TMD onset in the analysis using imputed data (HR=1.12). 

Of the 3,263 participants enrolled into the inception cohort, 2,737 (84%) completed one or more quarterly follow-up questionnaires, with a median of 10 follow-up questionnaires over a median 2.8 follow-up year period. 

While multiple psychological measures predicted TMD onset in univariate analyses, results of multivariable models provide strong evidence that reported somatic symptoms represents the strongest predictor of incident TMD in this analysis. 

When the average eigenvalue from these randomly generated data sets is larger than the corresponding eigenvalue of the original data, then the principal component associated with that eigenvalue is likely to be random noise (see Supplementary e-Figure 1). 

This suggests that Stress and Negative Affectivity does not additively contribute to TMD risk over and above Global Psychological and Somatic Symptoms, rather in the absence of global symptomatology, stress/negative affect emerges as a potentially important risk factor. 

For the CSQ Ignoring Pain Sensations scale, TMD incidence was greatest at a score of 0 and decreased in linear fashion until a score of approximately two, beyond which incidence increased slightly. 

Parallel analysis estimates the number of components to include in a PCA model by generating random data sets with the same numbers of observations and predictor variables as the original data. 

In univariate analyses, Stress and Negative Affectivity also predicted incident TMD; however, this association became weak or non-significant in multivariable analyses that adjusted for the other principal components. 

the subscales of the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (Rumination, Magnification, Helplessness) predicted TMD onset to a statistically significant degree, although the Helplessness scale was weakly significant when using imputed data (HR=1.12).