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Background information

Do you grind your teeth? Then you’ve come to the right place.

Mareike Steger
12/9/2023
Translation: Elicia Payne

You’ll know the reflex. When you’re tense, you clench your jaw. But some people have overly active masticatory muscles when they sleep and grind their teeth. The scientific term is bruxism and the phenomenon can be treated with a simple 3-step therapy known as SMS.

But it wasn’t just academics who looked at the correlation between bruxism and stress during the pandemic: «Lay people were also interested in the topic, as this study reveals the demand for the term bruxism in Google searches at the time of the pandemic.»

Tooth grinding: a central nervous phenomenon

Bruxism is a term used by specialists to describe two phenomena: teeth grinding and jaw clenching, i.e. when you bite down hard on your side teeth. This is often noticeable in the morning after waking up, but also throughout the day.

Today, researchers agree that bruxism is a phenomenon of the central nervous system – and not, as was long assumed, an anatomical-morphological one. Plus: teeth grinding or clenching also isn’t triggered by the fact that your upper and lower teeth are in a certain contact with each other.

Bruxism is now no longer considered a disorder or dysfunction. Rather, it’s an expression of physiological and behavioural processes: grinding is, on the one hand, a stress valve. On the other hand – and you will have certainly observed this yourself – people clench their teeth when they carry heavy loads. Grinding during sleep conveniently causes open airways too.

By the way, a lot of people do this: Jens Christoph Türp reports on population studies according to which about 60 out of 100 adults are affected by bruxism. «For 8 out of 100 it’s even severe enough that therapy is advised.»

However, the high number of unreported cases is unknown. After all, bruxism isn’t an issue people are conscious of. «Nobody says, 'I’m stressed, so I’m going to clench and grind,'» Türp says. Therefore, COVID-19 hasn’t triggered a teeth-grinding «trend» nor have people discovered bruxism as a stress-relieving measure. They just do it. Most without knowing.

Bruxism: grinding and clenching derives from body tension

Pronounced bruxism can also be recognised visually by the increased masseter muscles (masseter muscle between the cheekbone and lower jaw) – and that, says the expert, «doesn’t always look visually attractive». Likewise, the expert eye can detect the abrasion of enamel or even the underlying dentine.

The all-clear: why bruxism isn’t all that bad

If the bruxism is so severe that it needs treatment, and is revealed at the latest by a dentist, or you suffer with tense jaws and jaw pain then specialists recommend SMS therapy. The first «S» means self-observation. «M» stands for muscle relaxation and «S» for splints.

Step 1: Self-observation

Step 2: Muscle relaxation

In muscle relaxation, patients learn relaxation techniques, for example progressive muscle relaxation by Jacobson. Usually, a one-time visit to a clinical psychologist or psychotherapist is enough for this.

Step 3: Splints

But as long as your teeth grinding and/or jaw clenching doesn’t cause pain or put undue strain on your masticatory system, you can carry on with this unconscious coping strategy.

Header image: Shutterstock

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Mareike Steger
Autorin von customize mediahouse
oliver.fischer@digitecgalaxus.ch

I could've become a teacher, but I prefer learning to teaching. Now I learn something new with every article I write. Especially in the field of health and psychology.


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