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Analysis of the characteristic of clinical symptoms and cone-beam CT imaging changes in temporomandibular joint osteoarthritis patients with chewing side preference

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Author:
No author available
Journal Title:
Chinese Journal of Stomatology
Issue:
7
DOI:
10.3760/cma.j.cn112144-20220430-00226
Key Word:
颞下颌关节;骨关节炎;锥形束计算机体层摄影术;偏侧咀嚼;Temporomandibular joint;Osteoarthritis;Cone-beam computed tomography;Chewing side preference

Abstract: Objective:To investigate the clinical symptoms and cone-beam CT (CBCT) imaging characteristics of temporomandibular joint osteoarthritis (TMJOA) with chewing side preference (CSP).Methods:One hundred patients with TMJOA diagnosed in the Department of Stomatology, General Hospital of the Chinese PLA from January 2018 to December 2020 were enrolled, including 32 males and 68 females, with an median age of 27.5 years (16-71 years). According to the habit of CSP, 100 cases were divided into 71 cases of TMJOA with CSP group and 29 cases of TMJOA without CSP group. The clinical symptoms were observed, including pain, TMJ sounds, limited mouth opening as well as the radiograph imaging changes of condylar bone. When analyzing the radiograph imaging changes of condylar, the cases with bilateral TMJ symptoms were excluded and the remaining cases were divided into symptomatic sides and asymptomatic sides with CSP or without CSP according to the symptoms of the chief complaint. SPSS 25.0 was used to analyze the statistical data. Age data did not conform to normal distribution so that median and quartile spacing were used for description, and Mann-Whitney U test was used for nonparametric test. Qualitative data such as gender, clinical symptoms and condylar lesion types were described by composition ratio and chi-square test was performed. Results:There was no statistical significance in age and gender of TMJOA patients in the group with or without CSP ( P>0.05). The incidence of pain in CSP group [83.1% (59/71)] was marginally higher than that in non-CSP group [65.5% (19/29)] but without statistical difference (χ2 =3.71, P=0.054). There was also no significant difference in TMJ sounds and limitation of mandibular movement between the two groups (χ2 =0.11, P=0.742; χ2 =0.48, P=0.489). Among all of joints, the most common types of TMJOA were articular flattening and shortening and erosion. CBCT showed that erosion [65.0% (130/200)], flattening and shortening [73.0% (146/200)], subcortical sclerosis [42.0% (84/200)], osteophyte [30.5% (61/200)] and subcortical cystic [15.5% (31/200)]. According to the different groups of chief complaint sides, intra-group comparisons show that the proportion of erosion in symptomatic sides of CSP group [80.0% (40/50)] was significantly higher than that in asymptomatic sides of CSP group [50.0% (25/50)] (χ2=9.89, P=0.002). Inter-group comparisons show that the proportion of condyle flattening and shortening in symptomatic sides of CSP group [84.0% (42/50)] was significantly higher than that in bilateral joint of non-CSP group (8/15) (χ2=8.81, P=0.032). There was no significant difference in the proportion of subcortical sclerosis, osteophyte and subcortical cystic between the group with or without CSP ( P>0.05). Conclusions:TMJOA patients with CSP may be more prone to clinical symptoms of pain and CBCT imaging changes of condyle erosion as well as flattening and shortening. CSP may be a promoting factor for the development of TMJOA.

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