Structural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular Disorders

Temporomandibular disorders (TMD) are a family of prevalent chronic pain disorders affecting masticatory muscles and/or the temporomandibular joint. There is no unequivocally recognized peripheral aetiology for idiopathic TMD. The central nervous system (CNS) may initiate and/or maintain the pain in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moayedi, Massieh
Other Authors: Davis, Karen
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
MRI
age
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34816
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-348162013-12-20T04:03:54ZStructural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular DisordersMoayedi, MassiehMRIPainTemporomandibular disorderChronic PainBrainPlasticityVoxel-based morphometryCortical thickness analysisDiffusion tensor imagingbrainwhite mattergray mattertrigeminalage031705670287Temporomandibular disorders (TMD) are a family of prevalent chronic pain disorders affecting masticatory muscles and/or the temporomandibular joint. There is no unequivocally recognized peripheral aetiology for idiopathic TMD. The central nervous system (CNS) may initiate and/or maintain the pain in idiopathic TMD due to sustained or long-term nociceptive input that induces maladaptive brain plasticity, and/or to inherent personality-related factors that may reduce the brain's capacity to modulate nociceptive activity. The main aim of this thesis is to determine whether there are structural neural abnormalities in patients with TMD, and whether these abnormalities are related to TMD pain characteristics, or to neuroticism. The specific aims are to delineate in TMD: (1) gray matter (GM) brain abnormalities and the contribution of pain and neuroticism to abnormalities; (2) the contribution of abnormal brain GM aging in focal cortical regions associated with nociceptive processes; and (3) abnormalities in brain white matter and trigeminal nerve and the contribution of pain. In groups of 17 female patients with TMD and 17 age- and sex- matched controls, magnetic resonance imaging revealed that patients with TMD had: (1) thicker cortex in the somatosensory, ventrolateral prefrontal and frontal polar cortices than controls, (2) cortical thickness in motor and cognitive areas that was negatively related to pain intensity, orbitofrontal cortical thickness that was negatively correlated to pain unpleasantness, and thalamic GM volume correlated to TMD duration, (3) an abnormal relationship between neuroticism and orbitofrontal cortical thickness, (4) abnormal GM aging in nociceptive, modulatory and motor areas, (5) widespread abnormalities in white matter tracts in the brain related to sensory, motor and cognitive functions, (6) reduced trigeminal nerve integrity related to pain duration, and (7) abnormal connectivity in cognitive and modulatory brain regions. In sum, this thesis demonstrates for the first time abnormalities in both peripheral nerve and CNS in patients with TMD.Davis, Karen2012-112012-12-18T16:53:58ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-12-18T16:53:58Z2012-12-18Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/34816en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic MRI
Pain
Temporomandibular disorder
Chronic Pain
Brain
Plasticity
Voxel-based morphometry
Cortical thickness analysis
Diffusion tensor imaging
brain
white matter
gray matter
trigeminal
age
0317
0567
0287
spellingShingle MRI
Pain
Temporomandibular disorder
Chronic Pain
Brain
Plasticity
Voxel-based morphometry
Cortical thickness analysis
Diffusion tensor imaging
brain
white matter
gray matter
trigeminal
age
0317
0567
0287
Moayedi, Massieh
Structural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular Disorders
description Temporomandibular disorders (TMD) are a family of prevalent chronic pain disorders affecting masticatory muscles and/or the temporomandibular joint. There is no unequivocally recognized peripheral aetiology for idiopathic TMD. The central nervous system (CNS) may initiate and/or maintain the pain in idiopathic TMD due to sustained or long-term nociceptive input that induces maladaptive brain plasticity, and/or to inherent personality-related factors that may reduce the brain's capacity to modulate nociceptive activity. The main aim of this thesis is to determine whether there are structural neural abnormalities in patients with TMD, and whether these abnormalities are related to TMD pain characteristics, or to neuroticism. The specific aims are to delineate in TMD: (1) gray matter (GM) brain abnormalities and the contribution of pain and neuroticism to abnormalities; (2) the contribution of abnormal brain GM aging in focal cortical regions associated with nociceptive processes; and (3) abnormalities in brain white matter and trigeminal nerve and the contribution of pain. In groups of 17 female patients with TMD and 17 age- and sex- matched controls, magnetic resonance imaging revealed that patients with TMD had: (1) thicker cortex in the somatosensory, ventrolateral prefrontal and frontal polar cortices than controls, (2) cortical thickness in motor and cognitive areas that was negatively related to pain intensity, orbitofrontal cortical thickness that was negatively correlated to pain unpleasantness, and thalamic GM volume correlated to TMD duration, (3) an abnormal relationship between neuroticism and orbitofrontal cortical thickness, (4) abnormal GM aging in nociceptive, modulatory and motor areas, (5) widespread abnormalities in white matter tracts in the brain related to sensory, motor and cognitive functions, (6) reduced trigeminal nerve integrity related to pain duration, and (7) abnormal connectivity in cognitive and modulatory brain regions. In sum, this thesis demonstrates for the first time abnormalities in both peripheral nerve and CNS in patients with TMD.
author2 Davis, Karen
author_facet Davis, Karen
Moayedi, Massieh
author Moayedi, Massieh
author_sort Moayedi, Massieh
title Structural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular Disorders
title_short Structural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular Disorders
title_full Structural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular Disorders
title_fullStr Structural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular Disorders
title_full_unstemmed Structural Brain Abnormalities in Temporomandibular Disorders
title_sort structural brain abnormalities in temporomandibular disorders
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34816
work_keys_str_mv AT moayedimassieh structuralbrainabnormalitiesintemporomandibulardisorders
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