1. Additional effects of therapeutic exercise and education on manual therapy for chronic temporomandibular disorders treatment: a randomized clinical trial.
- Author
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Justribó-Manion, Cristian, Mesa-Jiménez, Juan, Bara-Casaus, Javier, Zuil-Escobar, Juan-Carlos, Wachowska, Katarzyna, and Álvarez-Bustins, Gerard
- Abstract
BackgroundObjectiveMethodsResultsConclusionPrevious studies have evaluated the implementation of behavioral approaches in individuals with chronic temporomandibular disorders (TMDs).To evaluate the benefits of a behavioral approach to craniofacial pain. Second, we assessed the benefits of kinesiophobia, catastrophizing, mouth opening without pain, and forward head posture.Individuals with chronic TMDs were treated for five weeks. The intervention group (
n = 17) underwent pain neuroscience education, manual therapy, and therapeutic exercise, whereas the control group (n = 17) underwent manual therapy only. Outcomes were evaluated immediately, at seven and 19 weeks follow-up. The assessment tools used were the Craniofacial Pain Disability Inventory, Pain Catastrophizing Scale, Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia, Mandibular Range of Motion Scale, and Cervical Range of Motion Tool.The interventions did not influence the differences in the improvements between the groups observed for craniofacial pain disability (inter-subject p 0.4). The intervention had a moderate influence on the improvement of kinesiophobia and catastrophizing (Inter-subject p 0.09 and 0.1 respectively) with a clinically significant effect size (Estimated mean (EM) −8.6 standard deviation (SD) ±3.48 p 0.019; and EM −7.6 SD ± 5.11 p 0.15 respectively).The behavioral approach improved catastrophizing and kinesiophobia outcomes in individuals with chronic TMDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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