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Comorbid disorders and sociodemographic variables in temporomandibular pain in the general Dutch population

Visscher, CM; Ligthart, L; Schuller, AA; Lobbezoo, F; de Jongh, A; van Houtem, CMHH; Boomsma, DI

Authors

CM Visscher

L Ligthart

AA Schuller

F Lobbezoo

A de Jongh

CMHH van Houtem

DI Boomsma



Abstract

Aims: (1) To determine the prevalence of temporomandibular disorder (TMD)–pain complaints in the general Dutch population; (2) to investigate its relationship with age, sex, educational attainment, and country of birth; (3) to determine its association with other pain complaints; and (4) to determine whether there are TMD subgroups (ie, with regard to their sociodemographic variables) that are more vulnerable for comorbid pain complaints. Methods: Data from two large-scale population studies were available: 975 randomly selected adults, who were interviewed by an examiner from the Institute for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), and 11,948 adults who were registered in the Netherlands Twin Register and responded to a survey questionnaire. Chisquared tests and regression analyses were used to determine whether there were any associations between the presence of TMD pain and the various sociodemographic or comorbid variables. Results: The prevalence of TMDpain complaints was 7.2% to 8.0%, and around twice as high in women than in men. The results were inconclusive for association with age, and no evidence was found for an association with country of birth or educational attainment. TMD-pain complaints were strongly related to the presence of other pain complaints. Interestingly, the number of reported comorbid complaints was related to all of the studied sociodemographic variables. Conclusion: In the general Dutch population, women more often report TMD-pain complaints than men, and patients with TMD-pain complaints more often show other pain complaints than persons without TMD pain. In contrast to common beliefs, no clear association with age was found. Furthermore, widespread pain complaints were more common in non-native Dutch and lower-educated females.

Citation

Visscher, C., Ligthart, L., Schuller, A., Lobbezoo, F., de Jongh, A., van Houtem, C., & Boomsma, D. (2015). Comorbid disorders and sociodemographic variables in temporomandibular pain in the general Dutch population. Journal of Oral and Facial Pain and Headache, 29(1), 51-59. https://doi.org/10.11607/ofph.1324

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2015
Deposit Date Apr 27, 2017
Journal Journal of Oral & Facial Pain and Headache
Print ISSN 2333-0384
Electronic ISSN 2333-0376
Publisher Quintessence Publishing
Volume 29
Issue 1
Pages 51-59
DOI https://doi.org/10.11607/ofph.1324
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.11607/ofph.1324
Related Public URLs http://www.quintpub.com/journals/ofph/gp.php?journal_name=OFPH&name_abbr=OFPH

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