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THE NIGHTLY GRIND The sound, which breaks the silence of the
night, can frighten small children and startle sound sleeping
adults. It has been likened to "someone walking up creaking
stairs" or "the cracking of nuts." It is the sound
of someone grinding or bruxing his teeth. Many dentists consider to
be conservative the published figures that 1 in 20 and 3 in 20
child grind their teeth. Although the noise may disturb spouses,
children, friends and roommates, it is in the long run far more
distressing to the bruxer, though he may not even know he is
bruxing, than to the listener. Stressful gnashing of the teeth in
sleep is virtually an automatic reflex of the neuromuscular system
and can exert thousands of pounds pressure per square inch on the
tips of the teeth. This can be very rough in deed on the teeth
themselves, as well as the bone, which supports the teeth, the gums
and the jaw joints.But before we investigate the sometimes painful
results of bruxism, lets look into the why. For many years it was
believed that bruxism was a tension symptom- that it stemmed from
emotional stress or instability.But several students have shown no
long- term psychiatric or psychological differences exist between
those who did and those who didn't grind their teeth. Most dental
authorities now agree that though emotional stress may be a
contributory factor, the main causes of bruxism exists right in the
patients mouth. Most people grind their teeth in an unconscious
effort to correct irregularities of the chewing surfaces of the
teeth- what your dentists terms malocclusion. They grind away in
order to eliminate a spot, which is too high, or so as to find a
comfortable place to fit the upper and lower teeth together. The
problem is that if opposing teeth do not meet properly they can
function as a fulcrum. The lower jaw acts as a lever with the jaw
muscles providing the driving force. Such a lever can create
stresses in the maloccluded teeth and, as we will see, in other
components of the head and neck complex, which are many times
greater than normal. You may not know that you grind your teeth,
but if you do, your dentist will know after a careful examination.
You may recognise signs of night grinding as top surfaces of teeth
gradually become worn down to flat, dull nubs. Bruxism can actually
crack a tooth, chip the enamel, or even cause teeth to shift,
thereby creating open spaces between teeth, which collect food and
encourage gum disease and tooth decay. The enormous forces of
bruxism can actually wiggle teeth loose. When through bruxism you
rock a tooth back and forth, the bone, which holds the tooth in
place, literally retreats from the root of the tooth. But this may
be only beginning of the problems. Often minor gum infections occur
because you do not brush your teeth properly, even for just a few
days, or because you do not have your teeth cleaned sufficiently
often by a dentist or dental hygienist. Bleeding of the gums upon
brushing the teeth may evidence such minor gum infections.
Frequently these infections can be aggravated when teeth are
jiggled in their sockets by bruxism. This can accelerate
development of "pyorrhoea pockets" or periodontal
pocket's as your dentist calls them. Sometimes the stresses of
bruxism are transferred to the jaw joint- the Temporomandibular
joint. This can result in pain on the side of the face in the areas
by the ears. The patient suffering from this problem most
frequently consults the physician and complaints of an earache. The
physician, finding nothing wrong in the ears will recognise the
earache to be a dental problem and refer the patient to the dentist
for treatment. Malocclusion can in fact, can cause the whole jaw to
jiggle out of place. Muscles will move the jaw to get a high spot
of a tooth into a place where it fits better. But when the jaw
moves to a new position, however slight, some other high spot
usually appears- sometimes on the other side of the mouth. The jaw
then finds a new place to twist and turn to find a comfortable way
to fit the teeth together. This locates part of the jaw joints
itself into new or compensating positions and can cause ligaments
and muscles to be excessively stressed and stained. It can also
cause clicking sounds in the jaw joint when you open and close your
mouth, as well as earaches, facial pain around the jaw joint, and
an inability to move the jaw. It can even cause dizziness and
impaired hearing. Moreover, there is a great deal of evidence today
that such stresses in muscles that move the jaw are transferred to
other muscles in the head and neck.This is because the head is
positioned on the spinal column like a big ball precariously
balanced on the end of a pole and stabilised only by an intricate
system of muscles and tendons. When one part of the system is
stressed, generalised stresses occur in the rest of the system.
These stresses or tensions in the muscles can cause such remote
ailments as soreness in the muscles of the neck, stiff neck, and
recurring headache- even on the top or back of the head.The
"catch" to bruxism then is that it solves no problems.
Instead of relaxing tensions, bruxism causes aches and pains, which
make for greater tension. So you bruise more. Bruxing then leads to
pain, which causes tension, which leads to more bruxing. What then,
can be done to eliminate bruxism? Sometimes it may be stopped and
wear on the teeth prevented by giving the patient a
"splint" to wear at night. Theses are similar to the
rubber or plastic mouthpieces worn by boxers and football players.
This however, is only a temporary treatment. Medications such as
muscle relaxants and anti-inflammatories may lessons pain but in
the long run are also only temporary measures. If a machine doesn’t
mesh properly we correct the defects so the parts fit together This
is what must be done in the mouth. Treatment of the chewing
surfaces of the teeth so that the teeth fit together properly is
called "occlusal Treatment." This may be accomplished by
orthodontics is also used in treatment of adults. Many times in
order to get the teeth to fit together properly, the dentist will
make an occlusal adjustment by reshaping the chewing surfaces of
the teeth. this procedure is called "occlusal
equilibration." More and more dentists today, as a part of
their regular dental examination, give periodic occlusal relation
examinations. In other words, they check to detect minute or gross
irregularities of the chewing surfaces of the teeth. This
examination can include checking the external jaw muscles for pain
and tenderness as well as the muscles of the head, neck and
shoulders. It may also include stethoscopic examinations of the jaw
joints for abnormal sounds such as clicking, as well as observation
of jaw deviation when the patient opens and closes his mouth.
Correcting the bite may be a simple matter of selective reshaping
of an offensive ridge of a too-high filling. However, many times in
order to adequately treat the occlusion the dentist may have to
employ a combination of procedures which might include selective
reshaping of the teeth, orthodontics to locate teeth in more
favourable positions, extraction of malposed teeth, or restoration
of the occlusion by means of inlays, bridges / dentures. When the
occlusal treatment requires that the dental restoration
(inlays,bridges,dentures,etc.) be constructed in the dental
laboratory in order to get a completely accurate picture of the jaw
movements, some dentists make a recording of the mechanics of a
patients jaw joint movements, some dentists make a recording of the
patients jaw joint functions.This recording is used to program a
mechanical jaw movement simulator to simulate the unique jaw
movements of the patient. When casts of the patients’ dental
structures are located in the simulator, the dentists can
accurately diagnose bite conditions and accurately plan and effect
occlusal treatments. By this means, dental treatments or
restorations can be planned so that the opposing teeth will meet
properly in any position in which the patient may elect to bring
the teeth together.
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THE NIGHTLY GRIND
The sound, which breaks the silence of the night, can frighten
small children and startle sound sleeping adults. It has been
likened to "someone walking up creaking stairs" or
"the cracking of nuts."
It is the sound of someone grinding or bruxing his
teeth. Many dentists consider to be conservative the published
figures that 1 in 20 and 3 in 20 child grind their
teeth. Although the noise may disturb spouses, children,
friends and roommates, it is in the long run far more distressing
to the bruxer, though he may not even know he is bruxing, than to
the listener.
Stressful gnashing of the teeth in sleep is virtually an automatic
reflex of the neuromuscular system and can exert thousands of
pounds pressure per square inch on the tips of the
teeth. This can be very
rough in deed on the teeth themselves, as well as the bone, which
supports the teeth, the gums and the jaw joints.But before we
investigate the sometimes painful results of bruxism, lets look
into the why.
For many
years it was believed that bruxism was a tension symptom- that it
stemmed from emotional stress or instability.But several students
have shown no long- term psychiatric or psychological differences
exist between those who did and those who didn't grind their teeth.
Most dental authorities now agree that though emotional stress may
be a contributory factor, the main causes of bruxism exists right
in the patients mouth.
Most
people grind their teeth in an unconscious effort to correct
irregularities of the chewing surfaces of the teeth- what your
dentists terms malocclusion. They grind away in order to eliminate
a spot, which is too high, or so as to find a comfortable place to
fit the upper and lower teeth together.
The
problem is that if opposing teeth do not meet properly they can
function as a fulcrum. The lower jaw acts as a lever with the jaw muscles
providing the driving force. Such a lever
can create stresses in the maloccluded teeth and, as we will see,
in other components of the head and neck complex, which are many
times greater than normal.
You may
not know that you grind your teeth, but if you do, your dentist
will know after a careful examination.
You may
recognise signs of night grinding as top surfaces of teeth
gradually become worn down to flat, dull nubs.
Bruxism
can actually crack a tooth, chip the enamel, or even cause teeth to
shift, thereby creating open spaces between teeth, which collect
food and encourage gum disease and tooth decay.
The
enormous forces of bruxism can actually wiggle teeth loose. When
through bruxism you rock a tooth back and forth, the bone, which
holds the tooth in place, literally retreats from the root of the
tooth.
But this
may be only beginning of the problems. Often minor gum infections
occur because you do not brush your teeth properly, even for just a
few days, or because you do not have your teeth cleaned
sufficiently often by a dentist or dental hygienist. Bleeding of
the gums upon brushing the teeth may evidence such minor gum
infections. Frequently these infections can be aggravated when
teeth are jiggled in their sockets by bruxism. This can accelerate
development of "pyorrhoea pockets" or periodontal
pocket's as your dentist calls them.
Sometimes
the stresses of bruxism are transferred to the jaw joint- the
Temporomandibular joint. This can result in pain on the side of the
face in the areas by the ears. The patient
suffering from this problem most frequently consults the physician
and complaints of an earache. The physician, finding nothing wrong
in the ears will recognise the earache to be a dental problem and
refer the patient to the dentist for treatment.
Malocclusion can in fact, can cause the whole jaw to jiggle
out of place. Muscles will move the jaw to get a high spot of a
tooth into a place where it fits better. But when the jaw moves to
a new position, however slight, some other high spot usually
appears- sometimes on the other side of the mouth. The jaw then
finds a new place to twist and turn to find a comfortable way to
fit the teeth together. This locates part of the jaw joints itself
into new or compensating positions and can cause ligaments and
muscles to be excessively stressed and stained. It can also cause
clicking sounds in the jaw joint when you open and close your
mouth, as well as earaches, facial pain around the jaw joint, and
an inability to move the jaw. It can even cause dizziness and
impaired hearing.
Moreover,
there is a great deal of evidence today that such stresses in
muscles that move the jaw are transferred to other muscles in the
head and neck.This is because the head is positioned on the spinal
column like a big ball precariously balanced on the end of a pole
and stabilised only by an intricate system of muscles and tendons.
When one part of the system is stressed, generalised stresses occur
in the rest of the system. These stresses or tensions in the
muscles can cause such remote ailments as soreness in the muscles
of the neck, stiff neck, and recurring headache- even on the top or
back of the head.The "catch" to bruxism then is that it
solves no problems. Instead of relaxing tensions, bruxism causes
aches and pains, which make for greater tension. So you bruise
more. Bruxing then leads to pain, which causes tension, which leads
to more bruxing.
What
then, can be done to eliminate bruxism?
Sometimes
it may be stopped and wear on the teeth prevented by giving the
patient a "splint" to wear at night. Theses are similar
to the rubber or plastic mouthpieces worn by boxers and football
players.
This
however, is only a temporary treatment.
Medications such as muscle relaxants and
anti-inflammatories may lessons pain but in the long run are also
only temporary measures.
If a
machine doesn’t mesh properly we correct the defects so the parts
fit together This is what must be done in the mouth. Treatment of
the chewing surfaces of the teeth so that the teeth fit together
properly is called "occlusal Treatment." This may be
accomplished by orthodontics is also used in treatment of
adults.
Many
times in order to get the teeth to fit together properly, the
dentist will make an occlusal adjustment by reshaping the chewing
surfaces of the teeth. this procedure is called "occlusal
equilibration."
More and more dentists today, as a
part of their regular dental examination, give periodic occlusal
relation examinations. In other words, they check to detect minute
or gross irregularities of the chewing surfaces of the teeth. This
examination can include checking the external jaw muscles for pain
and tenderness as well as the muscles of the head, neck and
shoulders. It may also include stethoscopic examinations of the jaw
joints for abnormal sounds such as clicking, as well as observation
of jaw deviation when the patient opens and closes his
mouth.
Correcting the bite may be a simple matter of selective
reshaping of an offensive ridge of a too-high filling. However,
many times in order to adequately treat the occlusion the dentist
may have to employ a combination of procedures which might include
selective reshaping of the teeth, orthodontics to locate teeth in
more favourable positions, extraction of malposed teeth, or
restoration of the occlusion by means of inlays, bridges /
dentures.
When the
occlusal treatment requires that the dental restoration
(inlays,bridges,dentures,etc.) be constructed in the dental
laboratory in order to get a completely accurate picture of the jaw
movements, some dentists make a recording of the mechanics of a
patients jaw joint movements, some dentists make a recording of the
patients jaw joint functions.This recording is used to program a
mechanical jaw movement simulator to simulate the unique jaw
movements of the patient.
When casts of the patients’ dental structures are located in the
simulator, the dentists can accurately diagnose bite conditions and
accurately plan and effect occlusal treatments. By this means,
dental treatments or restorations can be planned so that the
opposing teeth will meet properly in any position in which the
patient may elect to bring the teeth together.
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