Coherence of jaw and neck muscle activity during sleep bruxism

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Abstract

Background: Studies have shown co-contraction of jaw and neck muscles in healthy subjects during (sub) maximum voluntary jaw clenching, indicating functional inter-relation between these muscles during awake bruxism. So far, coherence of jaw and neck muscles has not been evaluated during either awake or sleep bruxism. Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the coherence between jaw and neck muscle activity during sleep bruxism. Methods: In a cross-sectional observational design, the electromyographic activity of jaw (masseter, temporalis) and neck (sternocleidomastoid, trapezius) muscles in individuals with “definite” sleep bruxism was measured using ambulatory polysomnography (PSG). Coherence for masseter-temporalis, masseter-sternocleidomastoid and masseter-trapezius was measured during phasic and mixed rhythmic masticatory muscle activity episodes using coherence-analysing software. Outcome measures were as follows: presence or absence of significant coherence per episode (in percentages), frequency of peak coherence (FPC) per episode and sleep stage. Results: A total of 632 episodes within 16 PSGs of eight individuals were analysed. Significant coherence was found between the jaw and neck muscles in 84.9% of the episodes. FPCs of masseter-temporalis were significantly positively correlated with those of masseter-sternocleidomastoid or masseter-trapezius (P

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Gouw, S., Frowein, A., Braem, C., de Wijer, A., Creugers, N. H. J., Pasman, J. W., … Kalaykova, S. I. (2020). Coherence of jaw and neck muscle activity during sleep bruxism. Journal of Oral Rehabilitation, 47(4), 432–440. https://doi.org/10.1111/joor.12932

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