Journal of the American Dental Association, Vol 120, Issue 3, 327-333
Copyright © 1990 by American Dental Association
The validity of tooth grinding measures: etiology of pain dysfunction syndrome revisited
JJ Marbach,
KG Raphael,
BP Dohrenwend,
and
MC Lennon
Public Health Division of Sociomedical Sciences, School of Public Health at Columbia University, New York.
The current study explores the proposition that a treating clinician's etiologic model influences patients' reports of tooth grinding, the validity of, and subsequent research findings relying on these measures. The investigation compares self-reports of tooth grinding and related clinical variables for 151 cases of temporomandibular pain and dysfunction syndrome (TMPDS) treated by a clinician who does not explicitly support the grinding theory of the etiology of TMPDS, and 139 healthy controls. Cases were no more likely than well controls to report ever-grinding, but were actually significantly less likely than well controls to report current grinding. They were also significantly more likely to report that a dentist had told them they ground. Findings suggest that studies using self-report, clinician-report of tooth grinding (or both) are methodologically inadequate for addressing the relationship between tooth grinding and TMPDS.