SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
Scoping review of systematic review abstracts about temporomandibular disorders: Comparison of search years 2004 and 2017 Donald J. Rinchusea and Charles S. Greeneb Greensburg, Pa, and Chicago, Ill
Introduction: The purposes of this study were to determine how many systematic reviews and meta-analyses relating to temporomandibular disorders (TMDs) had been published as of 2017 compared with those published as of 2004 and then to summarize the findings, based on an analysis of the abstracts from those studies. Methods: A PubMed search was initiated on May 1, 2017. There were 2 separate searches. The first search was for the topic, “temporomandibular disorders.” The second search was for “temporomandibular disorders and published in the Cochrane database.” The number and the topic category of reviews for 2017 were compared with those published as of 2004. Results: There were 120 relevant TMD systematic reviews found in search year 2017: 110 from the PubMed and 10 from the Cochrane searches. By comparison, there were only 8 TMD systematic reviews published in 2004. The abstracts for all 120 reviews indicated increased roles of genetics and psychosocial factors in the etiology of TMD. The future of TMD diagnoses appears to be toward various psychosocial and cellular tests, along with brain neuroimaging. The reviews on the topic of “treatment” supported conservative, noninvasive, reversible therapies, with a trend toward more targeted individual strategies. Conclusions: There were only 8 TMD systematic reviews published in 2004 compared with 110 in 2017. Overall, the trend has been in the direction of better diagnostic procedures, more scientific concepts of etiology, and more conservative treatments for TMD. (Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop 2018;154:35-46)
O
nce considered a single disorder with a single cause, temporomandibular disorders (TMDs) are now considered a collection of musculoskeletal conditions involving the masticatory muscles, temporomandibular joints (TMJs), and associated structures.1,2 According to the American Dental Association's first TMD conference, held in June 1982, there are 6 subclasses of TMD: masticatory muscle disorders, derangements of the TMJs, traumatic arthritis, degenerative joint diseases, chronic mandibular hypomobility, and growth disorders.1 There is a multifactorial etiology for each subclass.1,2 Occlusion and specific locations of the condyles in the glenoid fossae a
Corporate practice, Greensburg, Pa. Department of Orthodontics, College of Dentistry, University of Illinois at Chicago. All authors have completed and submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest, and none were reported. Address correspondenct to: Donald J. Rinchuse, 7269 Mansfield Lane, Irwin, PA 15642; e-mail,
[email protected]. Submitted, January 2017; revised and accepted, December 2017. 0889-5406/$36.00 Ó 2018 by the American Association of Orthodontists. All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajodo.2017.12.011 b
(eg, centric relation) are no longer considered to be the primary factors in the multifactorial etiology of TMD.2-7 For many years, orthodontists have had serious interests and concerns about TMDs. In 1988, Greene3 asked, “Does orthodontic treatment cause, cure, or prevent TMDs?” His answer to all 3 parts of the question was “no,” based on the limited research available at that time. Since then, there has been a tremendous increase in interest in this issue in the orthodontic specialty and the entire dental profession. The huge number of clinical and scientific studies reported in the past 30 years on TMJ topics has led to many systematic reviews and meta-analyses of that literature. In the end, the current literature has supported4-7 the 1988 conclusions of Greene; orthodontics does not generally cause, mitigate, or cure TMD, nor does it prevent the future development of TMD.7 Discussions about the etiology and treatment of TMDs have moved away from a historic, dental-based model to a biopsychosocial model that integrates the host of biologic, behavioral, and social factors that are related to the onset, maintenance, and management of 35
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TMD.8-10 Many studies have led to the conclusion that TMD treatments should be, at least initially, conservative (noninvasive), reversible, palliative, and when possible based on science and evidence.2,3,5,8,9 A medical orthopedic approach is recommended that focuses on the biomedical sciences and musculoskeletal therapies similar to those for most chronic pain.9 Cognitive-behavioral therapies and biofeedback are now prominent among contemporary TMD treatment modalities.8-10 Genetics (vulnerabilities related to pain), cell studies, endocrinology, behavioral risk-conferring factors, and brain neuroimaging are the exciting future of TMD studies.8-10 Systematic reviews (and meta-analyses) are at the highest level in the hierarchy of scientific evidence. Systematic reviews involve an exhaustive search of the literature on a topic, and then an expert panel selects a limited number of worthy studies, mostly randomized controlled trials (RCTs), to be included in the review.11 Depending on the nature of the review, RCTs may not be included. The relevant information from the chosen studies is then interpreted and summarized.11 The Cochrane database of systematic reviews takes a more discriminatory approach; authors submit proposals that are reviewed by its editorial team, with systematic reviews updated at least every 4 years. It would be of interest for dentists, including orthodontists, to know and understand the information in TMD systematic reviews to make objective, evidencebased decisions regarding patient diagnoses and treatments. In 2006, Rinchuse and McMinn12 published a report in which they listed, reviewed, and discussed the 8 TMD systematic reviews (1 was a meta-analysis) published in 2004. The purpose of this current investigation was to obtain the listings and abstracts of all the TMD systematic reviews published up to 2017 and then to present this information in 6 tables arranged by topic heading: prevalence, diagnosis, etiology, treatment, surgery, and miscellaneous (Appendix Tables I-VI). The numeric data from the 2017 search was compared with those from 2004. MATERIAL AND METHODS
Two PubMed searches were initiated on May 1, 2017, to look for systematic reviews and meta-analyses related to TMD. The first search was for the topic, “temporomandibular disorders.” The second search was for “temporomandibular disorders and published in the Cochrane database.” The number of reviews and categories of the topics covered in those reviews were compared with the 8 TMD systematic reviews published in 2004. For the purpose of this study, only the abstracts of the
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systematic reviews were obtained and analyzed to create the tables of results presented in this article. The inclusion criteria were all systematic reviews (meta-analyses) listed in the PubMed and Cochrane databases for a search on May 1, 2017, under the title of “temporomandibular disorders.” The exclusion criterion for the general PubMed search was articles that were not TMD systematic reviews or had missing information; for the Cochrane database, the exclusion criterion was any articles that were withdrawn because they were supplanted by an updated review on a certain TMD topic. The salient information from the systematic reviews for both searches was placed into 6 categories: prevalence, diagnosis, etiology, treatment, surgery, and miscellaneous. From the abstracts, tables were constructed for each category; the most notable information from each abstract, such as author and year, topic, number of articles meeting the selection criteria, quality of the review, and findings and conclusions are included in the 6 Appendix Tables. A table was also constructed comparing the numbers and categories of TMD systematic reviews from the 2004 search with those from the 2017 search (Table I). In addition, for the 2017 search, PubMed listings were compared with Cochrane listings (Table I). Results were summarized per numeric comparison, as well as per narrative, informational findings. The quality of the systematic reviews was evaluated and reported. The criteria and protocol for the assessment of the quality of the studies were based on what their authors stated, as well as the subjective opinions (when possible to ascertain from only reading an abstract) of the authors. RESULTS
For the first PubMed search, there were 115 listings for TMDs; 110 were relevant. For the second search in the Cochrane databse, there were 19 listings; 10 were relevant; the other 9 had been withdrawn because the listings were replaced by more current reviews. The 5 articles excluded from the general PubMed listing had various deficiencies: (1) older review with no author identification, (2) article dealing with pain that was not a systematic review, (3) article on exercise and TMD with not all information reported (ie, only reported title and author), (4) article that was a critique of a publication by a world-renowned TMD expert who summarized the American Association of Dental Research 2010 Policy Statement on TMD and was not a systematic review, and (5) review that did not explicitly deal with TMD. We divided the reviews into 6 categories: diagnosis, etiology, prevalence, treatment, surgery, and miscellaneous.
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Table I. Comparison of the numbers of TMD systematic reviews (and meta-analyses) published in 2004 and 2017 in
various categories Year 2004 2017 (PubMed) 2017 (Cochrane)
Prevalence 4
Diagnosis 1 13
Etiology 3 16
The quality of the studies analyzed in all reviews was low to low-medium, with no high-level quality of evidence reported in any publication. The 8 reviews from 2004 that had been analyzed by Rinchuse and McMinn12 in 2006 were compared with the 110 reviews found by searching in 2017 (Table I). The 10 Cochrane 2017 reviews were also compared. For 2004, half of the reviews (4 of 8) were related to treatment, and 4 were related to etiology. For 2017, most of the reviews (58 of 110) in the PubMed listing were for TMD treatments, whereas all 10 of the Cochrane reviews for 2017 were related to TMD treatment. The reviews for TMD treatment focused on conservative, reversible, low-tech, and noninvasive therapies vs aggressive, irreversible treatments (Appendix Table IV). For instance, there were only 3 reviews from the general PubMed search (Appendix Table IV) and 1 review from the Cochrane search (Table II) that dealt with occlusal adjustments (an irreversible form of treatment); all of those reviews reported a lack of support for this type of TMD treatment. The 2017 systematic review findings indicated increased roles of genetics and psychosocial factors in the etiology of TMD. There was little to no support for a causal relationship between occlusal factors and TMD, and occlusion-changing treatments were not supported by evidence. Data do not indicate that traditional orthodontic treatment increased the prevalence or risk of TMD. The future of TMD diagnosis appears to be toward various cellular and psychosocial tests, along with brain neuroimaging. The reviews on treatment supported conservative, noninvasive, reversible therapies, with a trend toward more targeted individual strategies. There were 4 TMD systematic reviews dealing with prevalence; 3 of those dealt with TMD prevalence in the general population,13-15 and 1 dealt with diagnostic findings in a TMD patient population.16 As in most reports on the prevalence of TMD, there was variability in the findings depending on age, sex, geographic region, assessment method, and so forth (Appendix Table I).13-16 Da Silva et al14 in 2016 reported that in the general population 1 in 6 children and adolescents has clinical signs of TMD, but their inclusion criteria for positive findings were questionable.
Treatment 4 58 10
Surgery 16
Miscellaneous 3
Total 8 110 10
Manfredini et al16 in 2011 reported that the most common diagnostic TMD finding in TMD populations is myofascial pain, with and without mouth-opening limitations; disc displacement with reduction was the most common finding in community samples (Appendix Table I). Thirteen articles addressed TMD diagnosis (Appendix Table II).17-29 The listings covered a host of subtopics such as cellular, imaging, ultrasound, muscle palpation, joint vibration, and posturography. Obviously, TMD imaging had the most scientific support, followed by ultrasound. Joint vibration and posturography had no evidence-based support when subjected to critical assessments. Interestingly, muscle palpation of the lower head of the lateral pterygoid muscle lacked scientific support.25 Importantly, there is growing evidence for various cellular tests for TMD, and this may be the future of TMD diagnoses. The etiology or cause of TMD has arguably been the topic of most interest in the TMD field over the past century. There were 16 general PubMed listings under this topic (Appendix Table III).30-45 The subtopics for etiology included bruxism, orthodontics, facial types, posterior crossbites, occlusion, heredity/genes, “brain,” hypermobility, posture, trauma/psychological, and whiplash. In the 2 reports that dealt with bruxism, there was a positive relationship between bruxism and TMD30,31; 1 of the reports was published in 2017, with the quality of the evidence low-moderate.30 There were 3 listings for orthodontics.32-34 The metaanalysis by Kim et al32 in 2004 is known in the orthodontic community; they concluded that, “although no definitive conclusions could be made due to the heterogeneity of the studies, the data do not indicate that traditional orthodontic treatment increased the prevalence or risk of TMD.” The review by Iodice et al33 in 2013 indicated that no conclusions could be drawn related to posterior crossbites causing TMD. Also, no conclusions could be drawn by Manfredini et al34 in 2016 related to facial/skeletal types (ie, Class II profiles and hyperdivergent growth patterns) being associated with TMJ disc displacement and degenerative disorders. In addition, there were 2 reports dealing with occlusion and TMD.35,36 Both reviews concluded that there is little
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Table II. TMD systematic reviews published in Cochrane database
Author Aggarwal et al46 2015
Topic Treatment/psychosocial
Articles meeting criteria /17
Al-Ani et al47 2016
Stabilizing splints
20/12
Low
De Souza et al48 2012
Treatment/TMD osteoarthritis/many types
/3
Low
Guo et al49 2015
Treatment/arthrocentesis lavage
/2
Low
Koh and Robinson50 2016
Treatment/occlusal adjustments
660/6
Medium
Luther et al51 2016
Treatment/orthodontics
284/55
Low
Mujakperuo et al52 2010
Treatment/pharmacology
/11
Low
Rigon et al53 2015
Treatment/arthroscopy
/7
Low-medium
Shi et al54 2013
Treatment/hyaluronate
/7
Low
Agostino et al55 2014
Not TMD/posterior crossbite
/15
Low
Quality Low
Findings/conclusions There is weak evidence to support the use of psychosocial interventions for chronic orofacial pain. However, given the noninvasive nature of such interventions, they should be used in preference to other invasive and irreversible therapies. There is insufficient evidence either for or against the use of stabilizing splints for the treatment of TMD. Evaluated the most common forms of treatment for TMD osteoarthritis. The reports indicated a not dissimilar degree of effectiveness with intraarticular injections consisting of either sodium hyaluronate or corticosteroids, and an equivalent pain reduction with diclofenac sodium compared with occlusal splints. Glucosamine appeared to be just as effective as ibuprofen. There is insufficient, consistent evidence to either support or refute the use of arthrocentesis and lavage for TMD. There is no evidence from randomized controlled trials that occlusal adjustment treats or prevents TMD. Occlusal adjustments are not recommended for management or prevention of TMD. There is insufficient data to answer the question whether orthodontics is a viable TMD treatment modality. There is insufficient evidence to support or not support the effectiveness of reported drugs for the management of pain due to TMD. Both arthroscopy and nonsurgical treatments reduced pain after 6 months. In comparison with arthroscopy, open surgery was more effective at reducing pain after 12 months. Nevertheless, there were no differences in mandibular functionality or other outcomes. Arthoscopy led to greater improvement in maximum interincisal opening after 12 months than arthrocentesis; there was no difference in pain. There is insufficient evidence to either support or refute the use of hyaluronate for treating TMD. The quad-helix may be more successful than removable expansion plates at correcting posterior crossbites for children in the early mixed dentition (ages 8-10).
/, the number before the symbol is the total number of articles accessed and the number after the symbol is the number meeting the criteria. If there is no number before the symbol, the number could not be ascertained from the abstract.
to no support for a causal relationship between occlusal factors and TMD. Of interest is the relationship of heredity and genes in the etiology of TMD. It is common knowledge that genes play a significant role in the cause or development of
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most diseases and ailments, and this now includes TMD. Visscher and Lobbezoo37 in 2015 found evidence for the role of heritability in the development of TMD pain: genetic contributions from candidate genes that encode proteins involved in the processing of painful
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stimuli from serotonergic and cathecholaminergic systems. Equally important is the role of changes in the brain in the development of TMD. Further consideration of this topic ultimately leads to the question of what causes the brain changes; it is clear that these are not the primary etiology for TMD. Brain neuroimaging has demonstrated that TMD patients show consistent functional and structural changes in the thalamus and the primary somatosensory cortex, indicating the thalamocortical pathway as the major site of plasticity. There is also the suggestion that cognitive modulation and reward processing play roles in chronic orofacial pain.38 Brain neuroimaging will almost certainly become an important investigative tool for understanding chronic orofacial pain.38 There were several other additional findings from the etiology category. One review on generalized TMJ hypermobility concluded that it was not clear whether there was an association with TMD.39 The role of head and cervical posture (craniocervical posture) in TMD was not clearly demonstrated in any of the 3 articles that dealt with this topic.40-42 Also, 1 review concluded that traumatic events (including psychological, emotional, sexual, or physical, including combat exposure) are associated with TMD.43 Whiplash trauma was considered an initiating or aggravating factor, as well as a comorbid condition for TMD; the prevalence of such trauma ranged from 8.4% to 70% in the TMD population compared with 1.7% to 13% in the non-TMD groups.44,45 All 10 Cochrane reviews dealt with TMD treatment (Tables I and II).46-55 As previously mentioned, 58 of the 110 PubMed reviews were in the category of “treatment” (Table I; Appendix Table IV).56-111 Several types of treatment modalities were reviewed, including various conservative and noninvasive approaches such as hypnosis and relaxation, counseling, biofeedback, acupuncture, pharmacology, physical therapy, manual techniques, and various exercises. Other modalities studied included occlusal splints, occlusal adjustments, injections, lasers, luxation, and so on. Of course, various surgical procedures were among the TMD treatments, but they are discussed below under the category of “surgery” (Appendix Table V). Parenthetically, dentistry in general and orthodontics in particular have for decades had an interest in the possible relationship between occlusion and TMD, and many experts and practitioners have assumed a causeand-effect relationship between these 2 variables. This has changed in the last several decades; by 2017, it was clear that occlusal variables are not a significant etiologic factor for the vast majority of TMD patients.50,94,96 We can now say that occlusal
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adjustments are not considered a logical and evidencebased treatment modality for TMD; there is no scientific basis, and it is an irreversible form of TMD therapy.1,2 To explain, there were 3 reviews from the general PubMed listing94-96 and 1 from the Cochrane listing50 dealing with this topic, and all of them pointed in the same direction: occlusal adjustments are not recommended for the management or prevention of TMD. The most recent of these reviews, from the Cochrane database, was by Koh and Robinson50 in 2016, and they reported that there was no evidence from RCTs that occlusal adjustment should be used to treat or prevent TMD. There was support for the various noninvasive and conservative treatment modalities such as counseling,56 psychosocial therapies,64-67 biofeedback,66,67 hypnosis/ relaxation,63 accupuncture,68-73 pharmacology,52,74-98 physical therapy/exercise,79-86 physiotherapy,88 and stabilizing splints.89-93 The efficacy of lasers was equivocal.103-106 Naeije et al61 found, with medium to high quality of evidence, that TMJ disc displacement with reduction is mostly stable and a life-long, painfree condition. Therefore, because of the favorable natural course of disc displacement, active treatment is only indicated for symptomatic disc displacement without reduction.61 TMJ injections with sodium hyaluronate, or corticosteroids, or botulinum toxin are inconclusive.97-102 There was no listing of orthodontics as a treatment choice among the systematic reviews for the general PubMed listing. In the Cochrane database, there was 1 article by Agostino et al55 in 2014 about the quadhelix appliance as a successful treatment for posterior crossbites in the early mixed dentition. This report was not a systematic review dealing with TMD. We decided to keep it in the Cochrane “treatment” listing even though it dealt with orthodontic treatment per se and not specifically TMD, because there has been a long history about the possibilities of crossbites associated with TMD. Most of the 16 TMD systematic reviews in the “surgery” category (Appendix Table V) dealt with surgical treatments and could also have been placed in the “treatment” category,112-127 but we decided to place them in the separate category of “surgery” in order to highlight those findings. Surgeries for TMD are indicated only when conservative and reversible treatments fail, for chronic conditions, or for an acute, sudden traumatic event in need of immediate attention. In the “surgery” category, 16 reviews112-127 were found in the PubMed listings (Appendix Table V), and 2 were found in the Cochrane listings (Table II).49-53 The 2 Cochrane reviews specifically dealt with surgical treatment for TMD. For the 16 PubMed listings, there
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were reviews that dealt with both the treatment efficacy of various surgical procedures and the effects of certain maxillofacial surgical procedures on the TMJs. In 1 Cochrane review, the authors concluded that there was insufficient evidence to either support or refute the use of arthrocentesis and lavage for TMD.49 The other Cochrane review was more comprehensive, comparing nonsurgical treatments with arthrocentesis, arthroscopy, and open surgery.53 Although both arthroscopy and nonsurgical treatments reduced pain after 6 months, open surgery was more effective than arthroscopy for pain after 12 months. In addition, there was greater maximum interincisal opening after 12 months with arthroscopy vs arthrocentesis, but there was no difference in pain.53 The 16 PubMed articles that covered surgical topics dealt with a wide variety of issues; readers are encouraged to read the summaries in Appendix Table V. Two noteworthy studies are mentioned here: Al-Moraissi117 reported that no final conclusion could be drawn for arthroscopy vs arthrocentesis for management of TMJ internal derangements; this is similar to the conclusions from the Cochrane reviews. From the review by AlRiyami et al113 in 2009, it was concluded that, although orthognathic surgery should not be advocated solely to treat TMD, it may be likely to improve TMD signs and symptoms; the quality of evidence was, however, low, and the review was dated. There were 3 publications in the “miscellaneous” category (Appendix Table VI).128-130 The first one by Fricton et al128 alerted the reader about certain limitations of TMD systematic reviews. Foremost is the potential for systemic bias, particularly for older studies, and therefore some systematic reviews should be interpreted with caution. Of the other 2 listings, 1 dealt with an unusual TMJ case of pigmented villodular synovitis,129 and the other concluded that having symptomatic TMD negatively affects oral health-related quality of life, which would be an expected finding.130 DISCUSSION
The main finding from this extensive search of the TMD literature was that there has been a marked increase in the number of TMD systematic reviews between 2004 and 2017. There were 8 reviews published in 2004 and 110 general PubMed listings and 10 Cochrane reports as of 2017. Although this increase is impressive, with few exceptions the quality of evidence for current TMD systematic reviews (2017) is low (weak); in most cases, the reviews are based on small numbers of RCTs. As a result, the intellectual yield from those studies still leaves much to be desired, with many issues remaining unresolved at this time.
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From an evaluation of the 110 currently available TMD systematic reviews (and 10 Cochrane reviews), it was apparent that most are on the topic of “treatment.” Not surprising is that most treatments considered in these reviews are in the category of conservative and reversible forms of therapy, including hypnosis and relaxation, counseling, biofeedback, acupuncture, pharmacology, physical therapy, and manual techniques as well as various head and neck related exercises. Other modalities studied included occlusal splints, occlusal adjustments, injections, lasers, luxation, and so on. Whereas the findings from those reviews were generally positive for all conservative therapies, the level of evidence was low. Aggressive and irreversible forms of TMD treatments, such as occlusal adjustments, were not supported by the evidence.50 The first organized attempts to deal scientifically with the issues related to TMD at a national level took place at the first TMD conference of the American Dental Association (ADA) in June 1982, with the findings published in the Journal of the American Dental Association in January 1983.1 A second ADA-sponsored conference took place in 1989.2 Current evidencebased reports and findings about TMD are often juxtaposed with the findings and recommendations from these 2 ADA conferences. The knowledge and understanding of TMD from an evidence-based perspective has certainly been bolstered by subsequent national TMD conferences including 1 sponsored by the National Institutes of Health in 1996131 and several educational conferences.132 The general guidelines and recommendations about diagnosis and treatment of TMDs from those conferences still hold true today, but there definitely is more evidence to support them. For example, the recommendations of the ADA conferences regarding treatment were that TMD management should be based on conservative and reversible (noninvasive) treatment modalities and, when possible, have a scientific basis for the recommended treatment.1,2 Evidence-based recommendations for TMD treatments that followed shortly after the ADA conferences were consistent with the conference recommendations.8,9 For instance, they emphasized that TMD treatments should generally be symptomatic and palliative; rarely do TMD treatments address causation or etiology.8,9 The more aggressive and irreversible types of TMD treatments were only necessary as a “when all else fails” option.8,9 As we learn more about chronic pain, it is clear that escalation to aggressive treatments is often inappropriate. In addition, the gold standard for TMD diagnosis in the early years was rather simplistic (but nonetheless true): (1) medical and dental histories, (2) TMJ clinical examination, and (3)
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when indicated, TMJ imaging.1,2,8,9 Parenthetically, orthodontics was considered TMJ neutral; it neither caused, prevented, nor cured TMD.7,133 Certainly, a consideration of these systematic reviews should be important to both the clinician and the academic with an interest in TMD. All general dental and orthodontic clinicians need to have current, evidence-based knowledge of the TMD literature to properly manage patients with signs and symptoms of TMD; this information also would be useful for patient referrals to other professionals. Furthermore, as stated by Mullmani134: “[It is] crucial for orthodontists to step up to the challenge and equip themselves with biologically sound scientific rationale and evidencebased facts to face the Google-equipped and informed patients and their interrogations.” By giving the reader succinct summaries of all 110 TMD reviews (and 10 Cochrane reviews), arranged in tables by topic categories, we hope that clinicians will find this updated information useful in dealing with TMD patients in their practices. After our data collection process in May 2017, another important TMD systematic review about TMD and occlusion was published in July 2017. Manfredini et al135 reviewed 822 citations and chose 25 studies that met their inclusion criteria (17 were case control studies of TMD vs non-TMD subjects). They believed that only 2 studies had high quality, whereas most fell into the moderate category. The general conclusion was that there was a lack of a clinically relevant association between TMD and dental occlusion; this means that occlusion should not be viewed as the critical host factor in the pathophysiology of TMD.135 This leads to the clinical implication that TMD treatments based on altering the dental occlusion should be viewed with caution, and patients should be advised of this current state of the evidence. As the past concepts of etiology and treatment fade away, there are important developments in the TMD field. Current evidence suggests that TMDs should be viewed as a group of orthopedic disorders, with strong genetic and psychosocial factors playing important roles.8-10 Of course, these developments were not expected by all previous TMD conferences. Experts now view TMD as a chronic musculoskeletal disorder, with all considerations of diagnosis and treatment based on those for orthopedics and physical therapy and physical medicine, as well as those related to chronic pain mangement.8-10 Regarding the genetic considerations for TMD, there are candidate genes that encode proteins involved in the processing of painful stimuli from serotonergic and cathecholinergic systems.37 Brain neuroimaging will increase to identify
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changes in brain areas related to chronic orofacial pain.38 No discussion of contemporary TMD research would be complete without noting the recent high level, evidence-based TMD study that was not a systematic review; it deals with one of the largest TMD research projects ever conducted. It was a 2016 report from 4 OPPERA studies that included the combined data from 4300 adults from sites in the United States: ie, 1 large cohort study and 3 case control studies.136 The findings from this report were that (1) there were higher rates of TMD in subjects with poor health and those who smoke and had deteriorating sleep quality, (2) participants' selfreports of jaw parafunction more strongly predicted TMD than did examiners' assessments such as tooth wear and TMJ derangement, and (3) among the 300 genes that were investigated, 6 loci were associated with chronic TMD, and 6 were associated with intermediate phenotype of TMD.136 This study was limited, since we evaluated only the abstracts from the systematic reviews in PubMed and the Cochrane database for 2017, and did not evaluate the full publications. Therefore, no assessment of the methodologic strengths and weaknesses of the these systematic reviews was undertaken. In addition, no conclusions could be drawn regarding the quality of the reporting of the systematic reviews in relation to PRISMA or the risk of bias at the review level. However, the analysis of only the abstracts was a deliberate choice, allowing us to present the complete panorama of what researchers have been reporting in their systematic reviews in this complex field. Also, it enabled us to edit those abstracts into readable summaries as presented in Appendix Tables I through VI. Furthermore, it was clear from reading these abstracts that all studies had not defined and classified TMD in the same manner. For instance, they did not always use the classic research diagnostic criteria/TMD criteria to describe their patient populations. The reader should therefore be cautious about interpreting the findings of each study, since it may include a mixed population of TMD subjects. At best, systematic reviews per se have limitations and shortcomings, so it is necessary to consider and evaluate all newly published literature.134 When the evidence-based paradigm was initially conceived, it was assumed that clinicians would merely need to wait and read published systematic reviews to be totally up to date on the literature in a field. Clearly, this is not the current belief regarding the utility of systematic reviews, including TMD systematic reviews. Therefore, clinicians should not abrogate their responsibility for acquiring the current best evidence in the TMD field by depending only on systematic reviews.134
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CONCLUSIONS
1.
2.
3.
There were over 110 TMD systematic review in the general PubMed listings as of 2017; in the Cochrane database, there were 10. In 2004, there were only 8 TMD systematic reviews. Most of the 2017 listings dealt with TMD treatments: 58 for the general PubMed listings and all 10 for the Cochrane listing. The recommendation in these TMD reviews was for conservative (noninvasive) and reversible therapies. Occlusal adjustments were not considered a logical and evidence-based treatment modality for TMD, because there is no scientific basis and also because it is an irreversible form of therapy. Much information could be gleaned from a study of the 2017 TMD systematic review abstracts.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
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Appendix Table I. Prevalence of TMD Author De Kanter et al13 1993
Topic Prevalence in population
Articles meeting criteria 6577 persons
da Silva et al14 2016
Prevalence in population
/11
Al-Jundi et al15 2008
Prevalence in population
676/17
Manfredini et al16 2011
Prevalence in population and in TMD clinic
/21
Quality Medium
-
Findings/conclusions Dutch-perceived dysfunction rate of 30%; clinically assessed dysfunction rate of 44%. One in 6 children and adolescents has clinical signs of TMD. The treatment need of TMD in the general adult population is substantial and varies according to definition, criteria, and age. RDC/TMD prevalence reports were highly variable across studies. Myofascial pain with and without mouthopening limitation was the most common diagnosis in TMD populations, and disc displacement with reduction was the most common diagnosis in community samples.
/, the number before the symbol is the total number of articles accessed and the number after the symbol is the number meeting the criteria. If there is no number before the symbol, the number could not be ascertained from the abstract. RDC, Research Diagnostic Criteria.
American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
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Appendix Table II. Diagnosis of TMD
Author Kellesarian et al17 2016
Topic Cellular DX
Articles meeting criteria /15
Reneker et al18 2011
Signs/tests
/7
Low
Hussain et al18 2008
Imaging
-
Dated
Ribeiro-Rotta et al20 2011
Imaging
257/1
Low
Koh et al21 2009
Imaging
219/23
Medium
Limchaichana et al22 2006
Imaging
494/22
Low-medium
Dong et al23 2015
Ultrasound
/11
Low
Li et al24 2012
Ultrasound
/15
Medium
Turp and Minagi25 2001
Muscle palpation
/5
Medium
Sharma et al26 2013
Joint vibration
/15
Low
Perinetti and Contardo27 2009
Posturography
/21
Low
Perinetti et al28 2013
“Body sway”
/12
-
Naeije et al29 2009
RDC/TMD
-
-
Quality Medium
Findings/conclusions Cytokines IL-10, osteoclastogenesis inhibitory factor/ osteoprotegerin (OCIF/OPG), and VEGF were found In the synovial fluid of patients with TMD, which could have an anti-inflammatory effect. No clear evidence to conclude whether current signs and tests are valid to diagnose TMD and distinguish among the subclasses. Axially corrected sagittal tomography is currently the imaging of choice for diagnosing erosion and osteophytes in the TMJ. CT does not seem to add any significant information to what Is obtained from axially corrected sagittal tomography. CBCT should be considered in the future. No conclusions could be made on the benefit of MRI and CT for TMD. No clear evidence was found for a relationship between clinical TMD signs and MRI. The evidence is insufficient for the diagnostic efficacy of MRI. Diagnostic value of high-resolution ultrasonography for detection of anterior disc displacement of the TMJ has advantages of simplicity and cost, but questionable diagnostic efficacy. The diagnostic efficacy of ultrasonography is acceptable and can be used as a rapid preliminary diagnostic method to exclude some clinical suspicions. Palpation of the lower head of the lateral pterygoid muscle lacks scientific support, and procedure should be discarded. Little to no evidence to support joint vibration analysis for diagnosis of TMD. Body posture monitoring: current evidence does not support the usefulness of posturography as a diagnostic aid in dentistry, including TMD. More related to orthodontics and only a minor impact for TMD. Body sway as a diagnostic aid in orthodontics may not be indicated. RDC/TMD have no great diagnostic value in the recognition of anterior TMJ disc displacement.
/, the number before the symbol is the total number of articles accessed and the number after the symbol is the number meeting the criteria. If there is no number before the symbol, the number could not be ascertained from the abstract. DX, disease; RDC, Research Diagnostic Criteria.
July 2018 Vol 154 Issue 1
American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Bruxism Bruxism
Kim et al32 2004
Orthodontics
950/31
Low
Iodice et al33 2013
Crossbites/TMD
2929/43
Low-medium
Manfredini et al34 2016
Facial types
/34
Low
Marzooq et al35 1999
Occlusion
275 articles
-
Gesch et al36 2004
Occlusion
22/4
Low
Visscher and Lobbezzoo37 2015
Heredity/genes
/21
-
Lin38 2014 Dijkstra et al39 2002 Olivo et al40 2006
“Brain” Hypermobility Posture
/14 /14 /12
Low Low
Rocha et al41 2013 Chaves et al42 2014 Afari et al43 2014
Posture Posture Trauma/psychological
22/17 /20 /71
Low -
Haggman-Hennikson et al44 2013
Whiplash
125/8
-
Haggman-Henrikson et al45 2014
Whiplash
129/32
-
Topic
Quality Low-medium low
Findings/conclusions Positive relationship of bruxism and TMD. Positive association with TMD pain for self-report or clinical bruxism, lower association for more quantitative and specific methods to diagnose bruxism. Anterior tooth wear not found to be a major risk for TMD. No definitive conclusions due to heterogeneity. Nonetheless, data do not indicate that traditional orthodontic treatment increased the prevalence of TMD. Posterior crossbite associated with the development of disc displacement, muscular pain, and tenderness, linked to skeletal and muscular adaptation and TMD? It was impossible to draw definite conclusions; long-term controlled studies are needed. No definitive conclusions, but the authors' conjecture was based on the review that it would seem reasonable to suggest that skeletal Class II profiles and hyperdivergent growth patterns are likely to be associated with increased frequency of TMJ disc displacement and degenerative disorders. Studies and literature do not support occlusal etiological factors in the etiology of TMD. Few associations were established between malocclusion or functional occlusion and signs and symptoms of TMD. Evidence for the role of heritability in the development of TMD pain is cumulating: genetic contributions from candidate genes that encode proteins involved in the processing of painful stimuli from serotonergic and catecholaminergic system. Thalamocortical pathway plasticity: prefrontal cortex and basal ganglia changes. It is not clear whether generalized joint hypermobility is associated with TMD. The association between intra-articular and muscular TMD and head and cervical posture is unclear. The relationship between TMD and head and neck posture is unclear. There is strong evidence of craniocervical postural changes in myogenous TMD. Traumatic events (of psychological, emotional, sexual, or physical nature) and combat exposure (PTSD) are associated with increased prevalence of functional somatic syndromes, including TMD. PTSD was significantly higher than sexual or physical abuse. Some evidence that prevalence and incidence of TMD pain is increased after whiplash trauma. The poorer treatment outcome suggests that TMD pain after whiplash trauma has a different pathophysiology compared with TMD pain localized to the facial region. Whiplash trauma might be an initiating or aggravating factor as well as a comorbid condition for TMD. The prevalence of whiplash trauma ranged from 8.4% to 70% in TMD populations, compared with 1.7% to 13% in non-TMD group.
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Author Jimenez-Silva et al30 2017 Manfredini and Lobbezzoo31 2010
Articles meeting criteria /39 /46
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American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Appendix Table III. Etiology of TMD
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Appendix Table IV. Treatment of TMD
Author de Freitas et al56 2013
Randhawa et al57 2016
Topic Counseling
Articles meeting criteria 581/7
/31
Quality Low
Turp et al59 2007
Noninvasive/conservative
/11
Akinbami60 2011
Conservative/noninvasive
128/79
Naeije et al61 2013
Conservative/disc displacement
167
Medium-high
Al-Baghdadi et al62 2014
Conservative/disc displacement
/20
Low/medium
Zhang et al63 2015
Hypnosis/relaxation
/3
Low
Kotiranta et al64 2014
Psychosocial
/7
Low
Roldan-Barraza et al65 2014
Psychosocial
-
Low
Crider and Glaros66 1999
Biofeedback
/13
Low
Crider et al67 2005
Biofeedback
/14
Medium
Ernst and White68 1999 La Touche et al69 2010
Acupuncture Acupuncture
/6 /4
Low -
323/5
Low -
Medium
Rinchuse and Greene
American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Liu et al58 2012
Cognitive-behavioral therapy/ self care/splints (noninvasive) Cognitive-behavioral therapy
Findings/conclusions Counseling- and self-management-based therapies could be considered conservative low-cost and beneficial treatment alternatives for treating TMD, with similar results to those of splints. Cognitive behavioral therapy, intraoral myofascial therapy, and self-care are therapeutic options for persistent TMD. Insufficient evidence to make a firm recommendation for the use of cognitive behavioral therapy over other interventions for treatment of TMD. Patients without major psychological symptoms do not require more than simple therapy. In contrast, patients with major psychological involvement need multimodal, interdisciplinary therapies; the importance of psychological factors In TMD pain. More complex and invasive methods of TMD treatments may not offer the best option and outcome, Recommend conservative approaches be used and exhausted before more invasive surgical treatments. A disc displacement with reduction is mostly a stable, pain-free, and lifelong condition of the TMJ. In only a few patients, the disc loses its capacity to reduce on opening. The favorable natural course of disc displacements only warrants active treatment for symptomatic disc displacements without reduction. The primary option is conservative, nonsurgical treatment focused at speeding up the natural process of alleviation of pain and improvement in mouth opening. For most patients, it is just a pain-free, lifelong, “noisy annoyance” from the TMJ. TMJ disc displacement without reduction.Patients with symptomatic disc displacement without reduction should be initially treated by the simplest and least invasive intervention. Hypnosis/relaxation therapy may have a beneficial effect on maximal pain and active maximal mouth opening but not on pain and pressure pain threshold. Evaluate RDC/TMD axis 2: cautious support for the notion that treatment targeted to different psychosocial subgroups of TMD paint patients may be beneficial. No evidence was found to distinguish the clinical effectiveness between “usual treatment” and psychosocial interventions for myofascial TMD pain. There was a tendency for greater improvements of psychological outcomes for psychosocial interventions, and physical functioning was slightly more responsive than “usual treatment.” Although limited, the available data support the efficacy of EMG biofeedback treatment for TMD. Surface electromyography training (SEMG) (biofeedback) with adjunctive cognitivebehavioral therapy is an efficacious treatment for TMD. Also, SEMG and biofeedback-assisted relaxation training (BART) are probably efficacious treatments. Low-level evidence that acupuncture is effective for TMD treatment. Short-term improvement; more studies needed.
Appendix Table IV. Continued
Topic
Quality
Acupuncture
/8
Medium
Cho and Whang71 2010
Acupuncture
/19
Medium
Jung et al72 2011 Wu et al73 2017
Acupuncture Acupuncture
/7 /9
Low
2001
Acupuncture
74/14
Turp et al74 2007
Pharmacology
/7
*Mujakperuo et al52 2010
Pharmacology
/11 496 subjects
Januzzi et al75 2013
Pharmacology
/2
Low
Senye et al76 2012
Pharmacology
/1
Low
List et al77 2003
Pharmacology
Cascos-Romero et al78 2009
Pharmacology
/11 368 subjects -
Craane et al79 2012
Physical therapy
/86
Armijo-Ovivo et al80 2016
Physical therapy
-
Low
McNeely et al81 2006
Physical therapy
36/12
Low
Medicott and Harris82 2006
Physical therapy
/30
Low
Low
-
Low-medium
Findings/conclusions Acupuncture is a reasonable adjunctive treatment for a short-term analgesic effect in patients with TMD pain Moderate evidence that acupuncture is an effective intervention to reduce symptoms associated with TMD. The evidence for acupuncture as a symptomatic treatment for TMD is limited. Conventional acupuncture is effective in reducing pain in patients with TMD, especially those with myofascial pain. In 3 of 3 RCTs, acupuncture proved effective for the treatment of TMD. Treatment should be given weekly for a total of 6 treatments. Pharmacologic meds led to at least some improvement of OHRQofL in patients with TMD. The only exception was patients with multiple TMJ surgeries. For the only RCT, a 6-week course of nonselective cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibitor naproxen may lead to slightly better OHQofL in patients with TMJ arthralgia than the selective COX-2 inhibitor celecoxib. Insufficient evidence to make a conclusion about effectiveness of a wide range of drugs (and combined with nondrug therapies) for the management of pain due to TMD. There was insufficient evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of palliative treatments (self-care) associated with anti-inflammatory vs other treatments, or absence of treatment on pain reduction in patients with TMD. Presently, there is insufficient evidence to support the use of topically applied NSAID meds to palliate TMJ degenerative joint disease. The common use of analgesics in TMD, including rheumatoid arthritis, atypical facial pain, and burning mouth syndrome is not supported by scientific evidence. Modest evidence to support the use of tricyclic antidepressants or the treatment of TMD. No conclusions drawn related to effectiveness of physical therapy for TMD treatment. Authors were most interested in quality of search methods. No high-quality evidenced was found, indicating great uncertainty about the effectiveness of exercise and mobilization and manipulation (MT) for treatment of TMD. No clear indication of superiority of exercise vs other conservative treatments for TMD. MT alone or combined with exercise at the jaw or cervical level showed promising effects. Poor quality studies on effectiveness of physical therapy interventions in TMD management. Look at acupuncture, active exercise, muscular awareness relaxation therapy, biofeedback, and low-level laser therapy. Recommendations viewed with caution. Active exercises and manual mobilizations may be effective. Postural training may be used combined with other interventions. Midlaser therapy may be more effective than other electromyography training. Programs involving relaxation techniques and biofeedback, electromyography training, and proprioceptive reeducation may be more effective than placebo or occlusal splints. Combinations of active exercise, manual therapy, postural correction, and relaxation techniques may be effective.
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La Touche et al70 2010
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Author
Articles meeting criteria
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Appendix Table IV. Continued
Topic Physical therapy/manual techniques
Martins et al84 2016
Physical therapy/manual technique
308/8
Low-medium
Brantingham et al85 2013
Physical therapy/manual technique
764/35
Medium
Fricton et al86 2009 Al-Baghdah et al87 2014
Physical therapy/exercise Manipulation/timing
626/113
Low
Paco et al88 2016 Kreiner et al89 2001
Physiotherapy Splints
/7 -
Low -
Turp et al90 2004
Splints
/13
Low
Ebrahim et al91 2012
Splints
1,567/11
Al-Ani et al92 2005
Splints
20/12
Low
Fricton et al93 2010
Splints
/47
High
Forssell et al94 1999
Occlusal adjustment/splints
/18
Dated
Fricton95 2006 Tsukiyama et al96 2001
Occlusal therapy/splints Occlusal adjustment
/11
Low (dated)
de Souza et al97 2012
Injections
/3
Low
Quality Medium-high
Low-medium
Findings/conclusions There is moderate to high evidence that manual techniques are effective. Upper cervical spine thrust manipulation or mobilization techniques are more effective than controls, while thoracic manipulations are not. Musculoskeletal manual approaches are effective for TMD. In the short term, there is larger effect regarding manual approaches when compared with other conservative treatments. There is a fair level evidence for manipulative and multimodal therapy (MMT) to specific joints and the full kinetic chain combined generally with exercise and multimodal therapy for lateral epicondylopathy, carpal tunnel, and TMDs, in the short term. No abstract in PubMed listing. At present, early intervention by “unlock” mandibular manipulation seems to be the most practical and realistic approach that can be attempted first in every closed locked patient as an initial diagnostic/therapeutic approach. Physiotherapy seems to lead to decreased pain and improve active range of motion. The use of occlusal appliances in managing localized masticatory myalgia, arthralgia, or both is supported by the available evidence. Most patients with masticatory muscle pain are helped by a stabilizing splint. Nevertheless, a stabilization splint does not appear to yield better clinical outcome than a soft splint, a nonoccluding palatal splint, physical therapy, or body acupuncture. Overall results were promising for reduction of TMD pain with splints. Low to very low quality evidence showed no significant difference between splints and control groups in regard to quality of life or depression. Stabilizing splints may be beneficial for reducing pain severity at rest and on palpation and depression. Hard stabilizing splints, when adjusted properly, have good evidence of modest efficacy in the treatment of TMD pain compared with nonoccluding splints and no treatment. Other types of splints, including soft stabilization splints, anterior positioning splints, and anterior bite splints, have some RCT evidence of efficacy in reducing TMD pain. However, the potential for adverse events with these appliances is higher and suggests the need for close monitoring. The evidence for the use of occlusal adjustments for TMD is lacking. The use of occlusal splints may be of some benefit. The experimental evidence was neither convincing nor powerful enough to support occlusal therapy as a general method of treating a nonacute TMD, bruxism, or headache. Management of TMJ osteoarthritis is not dissimilar to effectiveness with intraarticular injections consisiting of either sodium hyaluronate or corticosteroid preparations. An equivalent pain reduction with diclofenac sodium compared with occlusal splints. Glucosamine appeared to be just as effective as ibuprofen.
Rinchuse and Greene
American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Author Calixtre et al83 2015
Articles meeting criteria /8
Author
Topic 98
Articles meeting criteria
Quality
Injections Injections
/19 /9
Medium Low
Li et al100 2012
Injections
Chen et al101 2015 Stoustrup et al102 2013
Injections Injections
/4 349 subjects /5 94/7
Low Low
Melis et al103 2012
Lasers
/14
Low
Maia et al104 2012 Chen et al105 2015
Lasers Lasers
/14 /14
Low Low
Petrucci et al106 2011
Lasers
323/6
Low
de Almeida et al107 2016
Luxation treatments
List and Axelsson108 2010
Many treatments
Stepan et al109 2017
Otolaryngology/primary care
te Veldhuis et al110 2014
JIA treatments
/40
Medium
von Bremen and Ruf111 2012
JIA treatments
/19
Low
Low
-
/30
4155/12
Medium
-
Inconclusive as to the effectiveness of hyaluronic acid in treating TMD. Intra-articular injections with corticosteroids and sodium hyaluronate seem to be effective for treating internal derangements of the TMJ. Inferior or double TMJ spaces drug injection technique show better effect than superior space injection technique, and their safety is affirmed. No consensus on the therapeutic benefits of botulinum toxin therapy for TMD. Limited level of evidence suggests potential benefits of intra-articular corticosteroid injections (IACI) for TMJ arthritis in juvenile idiopathic arthritis patients. No knowledge is available on the long-term impact of IACI on mandibular growth. No definitive conclusion could be drawn on the efficacy of low-level laser therapy for the treatment of TMD. With caution, low-level laser therapy seemed to be effective in reducing TMD pain. Low-level laser therapy has limited efficacy in reducing pain In patients with TMD. However, it can significantly improve the functional outcomes of patients with TMD. Currently, no evidence supports the effectiveness of low-level laser therapy in treatment of TMD. There are several surgical and conservative treatment options. There is no goodquality evidence on which treatment options guarantee the long-term elimination of recurrent TMJ luxation. Eminectomy has often been used as a rescue procedure for postsurgical relapse. There is some evidence that the following can be effective In alleviating TMD pain: occlusal appliances, acupuncture, behavioral therapy, jaw exercises, postural training, and some pharmacologic treatments. Evidence for the effect of electrophysical modalities and surgery is insufficient, and occlusal adjustment seems to have no effect. Simple treatments can be initiated by the otolaryngologist; then referral to dentist, oral surgeon, physiotherapist if simple pharmacological treatment or TMD exercises fail. TMJ involvement in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) has a high incidence. There is no consensus on the treatment of TMJ pathology and dentofacial deformities in JIA, and treatment varies from counseling to surgery. Due to the heterogeneous patient samples, it is currently impossible to draw conclusions on the influence of various types of JIA on craniofacial morphology.
/, the number before the symbol is the total number of articles accessed and the number after the symbol is the number meeting the criteria. If there is no number before the symbol, the number could not be ascertained from the abstract. RDC, Research Diagnostic Criteria.
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Manfredini et al 2010 Machado et al99 2013
Findings/conclusions
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American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Appendix Table IV. Continued
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Appendix Table V. Surgical treatments for TMD
Topic Surgery
Al-Riyami et al113 2009
Surgery
480/53
Low
Abrahamsson et al114 2007 Bermell-Baviera et al115 2016
Surgery Surgery
467/3 544/22
Low Medium
Al-Moraissi116 2015
Surgery
/7
Low
Al-Moraissi117 2015
Surgery
/6
Low
Al-Moraissi et al118 2015
Surgery
/16
Low
Ma et al119 2015
Surgery
/8
Low
Al-Moraissi and Wolford120 2017
Surgery
/12
Low-medium
Katsnelson et al121 2012
Surgery
/4
Low
Lindenmeyer et al122 2010 Reston and Turkelson123 2003
Surgery Surgery
/32 -
-
Vos et al124 2013
Surgery
/3
Low
Ma et al125 2015
Surgery
/8
Low
Catherine et al126 2016
Surgery
32/17
-
Al-Saleh et al127 2012
Surgery
271/12
Low
Quality -
Findings/conclusions Interstudy comparisons are difficult with the diversity of diagnostic criteria and classification methods. Although orthognathic surgery should not be advocated solely to treat TMD, subjects who have orthognathic surgery for correction of dentofacial deformities appear more likely to see improvement in their signs and symptoms of TMD. Scientific evidence was insufficient to evaluate the effects of orthognathic surgery on TMD. Mandibular advancement surgery can neither improve or worsen TMJ health. Condylar resorption is accelerated after mandibular advancement surgery. Open surgery for management of TMJ internal derangements is superior to arthroscopic surgery pain reduction, with comparable results for maximal incisal opening, jaw function, and clinical findings. Arthroscopic lysis and lavage provide greater improvements in maximal opening and comparable pain reduction compared with arthroscopic surgery. No final conclusion could be drawn about arthroscopy vs arthrocentesis for management of TMJ internal derangement. Both have comparable postoperative complication rates. TMJ ankylosis: which surgery? Various surgeries were best for some symptoms vs others: gap arthroscopy, interpositional gap, reconstruction using alloplastic and nonplastic grafts. TMJ ankylosis: interpositional arthroplasty and reconstructive arthroplasty produce similar outcomes. Counterclockwise rotation of the maxillomandibular complex Is a stable procedure for patients with healthy TMJs undergoing concomitant TMJ disc repositioning. TMJ ankylosis: gap arthroplasty had better postoperative maximal incisal opening than ankyloses resection and ramus-condyle reconstruction with a costochondral graft. No evidence of orthognathic surgery cause or therapeutic benefit for chronic painful TMD. Surgical treatments for appear to provide some benefit to TMD patients refractory to nonsurgical therapies. Most reliable evidence supports the effectiveness of arthrocentesis and arthroscopy for patients with disc displacements without reduction. Arthralgia of the TMJ; lavage might be slightly more effective than nonsurgical treatment for pain reduction. TMJ ankylosis: interpositional arthroplasty better than gap arthroplasty, with larger maximal incisal opening and similar incidence of reankylosis. Condylar resorption after orthognathic surgery: mainly occurred in 14- to 50-year-old women with preexisting TMJ dysfunction, estrogen deficiency, Class II malocclusion with high mandibular plane angle, diminished posterior facial height, and posteriorly inclined condylar neck, mandibular advancements greater than 10 mm, counterclockwise rotation of the mandible, and posterior condylar repositioning. Transmandibular surgery in oral and oropharyngeal cancers and morphologic and functional changes in the TMJ and stomatognathic system? No firm conclusions.
Rinchuse and Greene
American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Author Al-Riyami et al112 2009
Articles meeting criteria 480/53
Author Friction et al128 2010
Topic Limitations/RCTs
Articles meeting criteria 210
Quality Medium
Safaee et al129 2015
Unusual case
Literature review
-
Dahlstrom and Carlsson130 2010
Oral health related quality of life
12
High
Findings/conclusions Review to evaluate the quality of methods used in RCT of treatments for management of pain and dysfunction associated with TMD and discuss implications for future studies. Much of the evidence base for TMD treatments may be susceptible to systemic bias, and most past studies should be interpreted with caution. However, improvement in RCT quality over time suggests that future studies may continue to improve methods to minimize bias. Pigmented villodular synovitis of the TMJ is rare, and surgical treatment outcome is excellent. TMD negatively affects OHRQoL
Rinchuse and Greene
American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Appendix Table VI. Miscellaneous topics for TMD systematic reviews
/, the number before the symbol is the total number of articles accessed and the number after the symbol is the number meeting the criteria. If there is no number before the symbol, the number could not be ascertained from the abstract.
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