Article Data

  • Views 287
  • Dowloads 23

Original Research

Open Access

Clinical Diagnosis Compared With Findings of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in 242 Patients With Internal Derangement of the TMJ

  • Richard E. Marguelles-Bonnet1,*,
  • P. Carpentier2
  • J. P. Yung1
  • D. Defrennes3
  • C. Pharaboz4

1Department of Prosthodontics, University Denis Diderot Pans 7, Faculty of Dentistry, Pahs, France

2Department of Oral Anatomy, University Denis Diderot Pans 7, Faculty of Dentistry, Laboratory of Orthopedic Research, URACNRS, Paris, France

3Department of Maxillofacial Surgeiy, Lariboisière Hospital, Paris, France

4Department of Radiology, Begin Military Hospital, Saint Mandé. France

DOI: 10.11607/jofph.09244 Vol.9,Issue 3,September 1995 pp.244-253

Published: 30 September 1995

*Corresponding Author(s): Richard E. Marguelles-Bonnet E-mail:

Abstract

The aim of this study was to compare the provisional diagnosis based on an initial clinical examination with subsequent findings of magnetic resonance imaging in patients with internal derangement of the temporomandibular joint. Clinical examinations were conducted on 242 patients (198 women and 44 men) who had unilateral (51%) or bilateral (49%) temporomandibular joint internal derangement. They were divided into the following categories: (1) disc displacement with reduction; (2) disc displacement without reduction; (3) "stuck" disc; (4) degenerative arthrosis with or without one of the above; and (5) normal temporomandibular joint of the contralateral side. There was no statistically significant difference in the distribution of disorders on a unilateral or bilateral basis or in the prevalence of disorders in right versus left joints. Based on the high occurrence of matching true-negative data, this study showed a highly statistically significant correlation between the magnetic resonance findings and the clinical data for all categories of derangement. Despite this high correlation, the magnetic resonance imaging and clinical diagnoses matched exactly in only 287 of the 484 joints studied. There was only partial agreement in the remaining 197 joints. The best clinical diagnosis in relation to the magnetic resonance findings was observed in the arthrosis category followed by the categories of normal joint, disc displacement with reduction, stuck disc, and disc displacement without reduction, in descending order. This study strongly suggests that degenerative arthrosis is a result of a long-term displaced disc. The clinical examination alone did not correctly indicate all the structural defects; therefore, it is insufficient for determining the status of the joint.

Keywords

temporomandibular joint; internal derangernent; magnetic resonance imaging; anterior disc displacement; arthrusis; "stuck" disc

Cite and Share

Richard E. Marguelles-Bonnet,P. Carpentier,J. P. Yung,D. Defrennes,C. Pharaboz. Clinical Diagnosis Compared With Findings of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in 242 Patients With Internal Derangement of the TMJ. Journal of Oral & Facial Pain and Headache. 1995. 9(3);244-253.

References

Abstracted / indexed in

Science Citation Index (SCI)

Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE)

BIOSIS Previews

Scopus

Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL)

Submission Turnaround Time

Conferences

Top