Temporal association between sleep apnea–hypopnea and sleep bruxism events |
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Authors: | Miku Saito Taihiko Yamaguchi Saki Mikami Kazuhiko Watanabe Akihito Gotouda Kazuki Okada Ryuki Hishikawa Eiji Shibuya Gilles Lavigne |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Gnatho‐occlusal Function, Graduate School of Dental Medicine, Hokkaido University, , Sapporo, Japan;2. Department of Temporomandibular Disorders, Center for Advanced Oral Medicine, Hokkaido University Hospital, , Sapporo, Japan;3. Department of Oral Implants, Center for Advanced Oral Medicine, Hokkaido University Hospital, , Sapporo, Japan;4. Department of Dental Radiology, Hokkaido University Hospital, , Sapporo, Japan;5. Erumunomori Medical Clinic, , Sapporo, Japan;6. Centre for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine, H?pital du Sacré‐Coeur de Montréal, , Montréal, QC, Canada |
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Abstract: | There is some evidence suggesting that obstructive sleep apnea–hypopnea syndrome is concomitant with sleep bruxism. The aim of this study was to investigate the temporal association between sleep apnea–hypopnea events and sleep bruxism events. In an open observational study, data were gathered from 10 male subjects with confirmed obstructive sleep apnea–hypopnea syndrome and concomitant sleep bruxism. Polysomnography and audio‐video recordings were performed for 1 night in a sleep laboratory. Breathing, brain, heart and masticatory muscle activity signals were analysed to quantify sleep and sleep stage duration, and number and temporal distribution of apnea–hypopnea events and sleep bruxism events. Apnea–hypopnea events were collected within a 5‐min time window before and after sleep bruxism events, with the sleep bruxism events as the pivotal reference point. Two temporal patterns were analysed: (i) the interval between apnea–hypopnea events termination and sleep bruxism events onset, called T1; and (ii) the interval between sleep bruxism events termination and apnea–hypopnea events onset, called T2. Of the intervals between sleep bruxism events and the nearest apnea–hypopnea event, 80.5% were scored within 5 min. Most intervals were distributed within a period of <30 s, with peak at 0–10 s. The T1 interval had a mean length of 33.4 s and was significantly shorter than the T2 interval (64.0 s; P < 0.05). Significantly more sleep bruxism events were scored in association with the T1 than the T2 pattern (P < 0.05). Thus, in patients with concomitant obstructive sleep apnea–hypopnea syndrome and sleep bruxism, most sleep bruxism events occurred after sleep apnea–hypopnea events, suggesting that sleep bruxism events occurring close to sleep apnea–hypopnea events is a secondary form of sleep bruxism. |
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Keywords: | masseter muscle rhythmic masticatory muscle activity sleep apnea– hypopnea syndrome sleep bruxism sleep‐disordered breathing tooth grinding |
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