Article Data

  • Views 304
  • Dowloads 29

Original Research

Open Access

Pressure Pain Threshold in the Detection of Masticatory Myofascial Pain: An Algometer-Based Study

  • Rafael dos Santos Silva1,*,
  • Paulo César Rodrigues Conti1
  • José Roberto Pereira Lauris2
  • Renato Oliveira Ferreira da Silva1
  • Luis Fernando Pegoraro1

1Department of Prosthodontics, Bauru School of Dentistry, University of São Paulo, Bauru, Brazil

2Department of Public Health, Bauru School of Dentistry, University of São Paulo, Bauru, Brazil

DOI: 10.11607/jofph.19318 Vol.19,Issue 4,December 2005 pp.318-324

Published: 30 December 2005

*Corresponding Author(s): Rafael dos Santos Silva E-mail: rafsasi@uol.com.br

Abstract

Aims: To compare pressure pain threshold (PPT) values for masti-catory muscles in patients with signs and symptoms of myofascial pain and in asymptomatic individuals. Methods: Fifty women with masticatory myofascial pain comprised the symptomatic group (group 1), while 49 TMD symptom–free women were selected as controls (group 2). The PPT was obtained with the aid of an algometer by applying pressure to the masseter and to the ante-rior, middle, and posterior temporalis. A 90.8% specificity value was used to determine the appropriate PPT cutoff values for all 4 muscles studied. Receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve areas and the likelihood ratio (LR) were also evaluated. Results: The 3-way ANCOVA test (group, muscle, and side) revealed a sig-nificantly lower PPT for all muscles in the symptomatic group (P < .001). The lowest overall PPT was found for the masseter muscle, followed by the anterior, middle, and posterior temporalis (P < .001). The 90.8% specificity was obtained with PPT values of 1.5 kgf/cm2 for the masseter, 2.47 kgf/cm2 for the anterior temporalis, 2.75 kgf/cm2 for the middle temporalis, and 2.77 kgf/cm2 for the posterior temporalis. The anterior temporalis had the highest LR. ROC curve areas of 0.84, 0.92, 0.90, and 0.90 were obtained for the masseter, anterior, middle, and posterior temporalis, respec-tively. Conclusion: The masseter and temporalis muscles require different pressures for distinguishing masticatory myofascial pain patients from asymptomatic individuals. Because the highest sensi-tivity (77%) and LR were found for the anterior temporalis, this muscle was considered to have the most suitable discriminative capacity.

Keywords

masticatory muscle; myofascial pain; pressure pain threshold; sensitivity; specificity; temporalis muscle

Cite and Share

Rafael dos Santos Silva,Paulo César Rodrigues Conti,José Roberto Pereira Lauris,Renato Oliveira Ferreira da Silva,Luis Fernando Pegoraro. Pressure Pain Threshold in the Detection of Masticatory Myofascial Pain: An Algometer-Based Study. Journal of Oral & Facial Pain and Headache. 2005. 19(4);318-324.

References

1. Truelove EL, Sommers EE, LeResche L, Dworkin SF, Von Korff M. Clinical diagnostic criteria for TMD: New classification permits multiple diagnoses. J Am Dent Assoc 1992;123:47–54.

2. Davenport JC. Pressure-pain thresholds in the oral cavity in man. Arch Oral Biol 1969;14:1267–1274.

3. Goulet JP, Clark GT, Flack VF, Liu C. The reproducibility of muscle and joint tenderness detection methods and maximum mandibular movement measurement for the temporomandibular system. J Orofac Pain 1998;12: 17–26.

4. Jensen R, Andersen HO, Olesen J, Lindblom U. Pressure-pain threshold in human temporal region. Evaluation of a new pressure algometer. Pain 1986;25:313–323.

5. Jensen R, Rasmussen BK, Pedersen B, Lous I, Olesen J. Cephalic muscle tenderness and pressure pain threshold in a general population. Pain 1992;48:197–203.

6. Dworkin SF, LeResche L, DeRouen T. Reliability of clinical measurement in temporomandibular disorders. Clin J Pain 1988;4:89–99.

7. Shaefer JR, Jackson DL, Schiffman EL, Anderson QN. Pressure-pain thresholds and MRI effusions in TMJ arthralgia. J Dent Res 2001;80:1935–1939.

8. Eckert SE, Goldstein GR, Koka S. Evidence-based dentistry series. How to evaluate a diagnostic test. J Prosthet Dent 2000;83:386–391.

9. Widmer CG, Lund JP, Feine JS. Evaluation of diagnostic tests for TMD. J Calif Dent Assoc 1990;18(3):53–60.

10. Farella M, Michelotti A, Steenks MH, Romeo R, Cimino R, Bosman F. The diagnostic value of pressure algometry in myofascial pain of the jaw muscles. J Oral Rehabil 2000;27:9–14.

11. Dworkin SF, LeResche L. Research Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Disorders: Review, criteria, examinations and specifications, critique. J Craniomandib Disord 1992;6:301–355.

12. McMillan AS, Lawson ET. Effect of tooth clenching and jaw opening on pain-pressure thresholds in the human jaw muscles. J Orofac Pain 1994;8:250–257.

13. Michelotti A, Farella M, Tedesco A, Cimino R, Martina R. Changes in pressure-pain thresholds of the jaw muscles during a natural stressful condition in a group of symptom-free subjects. J Orofac Pain 2000;14:279–285.

14. McMillan AS, Blasberg B. Pain-pressure threshold in painful jaw muscles following trigger point injection. J Orofac Pain 1994;8:384–390.

15. List T, Helkimo M, Karlsson R. Influence of pressure rates on the reliability of a pressure threshold meter. J Craniomandib Disord 1991;5:173–178.

16. Rao G. What is an ROC curve? J Fam Pract 2003;52:695.[Author: was this an editorial?]

17. DeLong ER, DeLong DM, Clarke-Pearson DL. Comparing the areas under two or more correlated receiver operating characteristic curves: A nonparametric approach. Biometrics 1988;44:837–845.

18. Sonis J. How to use and interpret interval likelihood ratios. Fam Med 1999;31:432–437.

19. Bohl CF, Knap FJ. Evaluating occlusal relationships, mandibular dysfunction, and temporomandibular joint pain by palpation. J Prosthet Dent 1974;12:80–86.

20. Goulet JP, Clark GT. Clinical TMJ examination methods. J Calif Dent Assoc 1990;18:25–33.

21. Isselée H, De Laat A, Lesaffre E, Lysens R. Short-term reproducibility of pressure pain threshold in masseter and temporalis muscles of symptom-free subjects. Eur J Oral Sci 1997;105:583–587.

22. Ohrbach R, Gale EN. Pressure pain thresholds, clinical assessment, and differential diagnosis: Reliability and validity in patients with myogenic pain. Pain 1989;39:157–169.

23. Fischer AA. Pressure threshold measurement for diagnosis of myofascial pain and evaluation of treatment results. Clin J Pain 1987;2:207–214.

24. Fischer AA. Pressure algometry over normal muscles. Standard values, validity and reproducibility of pressure threshold. Pain 1987;30:115–126.

25. List T, Helkimo M, Falk G. Reliability and validity of a pressure threshold meter in recording tenderness in the masseter muscle and the anterior temporalis muscle. J Craniomandib Pract 1989;7:223–229.

26. Ohrbach R, Gale EN. Pressure pain threshold in normal muscles: Reliability, measurement effects, and topographic differences. Pain 1989;37:257–263.

27. Reeves JL, Jaeger B, Graff-Radford SB. Reliability of the pressure algometer as a measure of myofascial trigger point sensitivity. Pain 1986;24:313–321.

28. Fredriksson L, Alstergren P, Kopp S. Absolute and relative facial pressure-pain threshold in healthy individuals. J Orofac Pain 2000;14:98–104.

29. Solberg WK. Temporomandibular disorders: Physical tests in diagnosis. Br Dent J 1986;160:273–277.

30. Kim HS, Chung SC, Kim YK, Lee SW. Pain-pressure threshold in the head and neck region of episodic tension-type headache patients. J Orofac Pain 1995;9:357–364.

31. Langemark M, Jensen K, Jensen TS, Olesen J. Pressure pain thresholds and thermal nociceptive thresholds in chronic tension-type headache. Pain 1989;38:203–210.

32. Chung SC, Um BY, Kim HS. Evaluation of a pressure pain threshold in head and neck muscles by electronic algometer: Intra-rater and interrater reliability. J Craniomandib Pract 1992;10:28–34.

33. Isselée H, De Laat A, Bogaerts K, Lysens R. Short-term reproducibility of pressure pain threshold in masticatory muscles measured with a new algometer. J Orofac Pain 1998;12:203–209.

34. Jaeger B, Reeves JL. Quantification of changes in myofascial trigger point sensitivity with the pressure algometer following passive stretch. Pain 1986;27:203–210.

35. Weinberg LA. The etiology, diagnosis, and treatment of TMJ dysfunction-pain syndrome. Part II: differential diag-nosis. J Prosthet Dent 1980;43:58–70.

36. Krogstad BS, Dahl BL, Eckersberg T, Ogaard B. Sex differences in signs and symptoms from masticatory and other muscles in 19-year-old individuals. J Oral Rehabil 1992;19:435–440.

37. Solberg WK. Temporomandibular disorders: Data collection and examination. Br Dent J 1986;160:317–322.

38. Kleinknecht RA, Mahoney ER, Alexander LD, Dworkin SF. Correspondence between subjective report of tem-poromandibular disorder symptoms and clinical findings. J Am Dent Assoc 1986;113:257–261.

39. Wijer A, Lobbezoo-Scholte AM, Steenks MH, Bosman F. Reliability of clinical findings in temporomandibular disorders. J Orofac Pain 1995;9:181–191.

40. Bendtsen L, Jensen R, Jensen NK, Olesen J. Muscle palpation with controlled finger pressure: New equipment for the study of tender myofascial tissues. Pain 1994;59:235–239.

41. Hesse JR, Van Loon LAJ, Naeije M. Subjective pain report and the outcome of several orthopedic tests in craniomandibular disorder patients with recent pain complaints. J Oral Rehabil 1997;24:483–489.

42. Reid KI, Gracely RH, Dubner RA. The influence of time, facial side, and location on pain-pressure threshold in chronic myogenous temporomandibular disorder. J Orofac Pain 1994;8:258–265.

43. Chung SC, Kim JH, Kim HS. Reliability and validity of the pressure pain thresholds (PPT) in the TMJ capsules by electronic algometer. Cranio 1993;11:171–176.

44. Cimino R, Farella M, Michelotti A, Pugliese R, Martina R. Does the ovarian cycle influence the pressure-pain threshold of the masticatory muscles in symptom-free women? J Orofac Pain 2000;14:105–111.

45. Gallagher RW, Dal Santo FB, Rugh JD. Design and construction of a pressure algometer. J Craniomandib Disord 1989;3:159–162.

46. Isselée H, DeLaat A, DeMot B, Lysens R. Pressure-pain threshold variation in temporomandibular disorder myalgia over the course of the menstrual cycle. J Orofac Pain 2002;16:105–117.

47. Mense S, Simons DG. Muscle Pain: Understanding its Nature, Diagnosis, and Treatment. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2001.

48. Robinson M, Riley JL, Brown FF, Gremillion H. Sex differences in response to cutaneous anesthesia: A double blind randomized study. Pain 1998;77:143–149.

49. Svensson P, Nielsen LA, Nielsen H, Larsen JK. Effect of chronic and experimental jaw muscle pain on pain-pressure threshold and stimulus-response curves. J Orofac Pain 1995;9:347–356.

50. Murphy GJ, McKinney MW, Gross WG. Temporomandibular-related pressure thresholds: A model for establishing baselines. J Craniomandib Pract 1992;10:118–123.

51. Douglass CW. Evaluating diagnostic tests. Adv Dent Res 1993;7:66–69.

52. Brunette DM. Reliability, sensitivity, and specificity of diagnostic tests and measurements. In: Critical Thinking: Understanding and Evaluating Dental Research. Chicago: Quintessence, 1996:99–111.

53. Mohl ND. Reliability and validity of diagnostic modalities for temporomandibular disorders. Adv Dent Res 1993;7:113–119.

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