Articles / Bruxism and temporomandibular disorders in GP


writer
Oral Medicine Specialist; Associate Professor and Discipline Lead in Oral Medicine, Dental School, University of Western Australia
0 hours
These are activities that expand general practice knowledge, skills and attitudes, related to your scope of practice.
0.5 hours
These are activities that require reflection on feedback about your work.
0 hours
These are activities that use your work data to ensure quality results.
These are activities that expand general practice knowledge, skills and attitudes, related to your scope of practice.
These are activities that require reflection on feedback about your work.
These are activities that use your work data to ensure quality results.
Tooth contact, jaw clenching or grinding may be completely benign; or it may indicate a pain source, create dental risk, or reflect an underlying sleep or neurological condition.
Estimates vary due to differing definitions and diagnostic criteria, but bruxism is common across all age groups: about 8% of adults, 14–46% of children and adolescents, and around 3% of older adults. Recent large-scale epidemiological studies suggest a population prevalence of roughly 25%.
For GPs, the key issue is not whether bruxism occurs, since most people clench or grind their teeth occasionally, but whether it is clinically significant.
When a patient presents with concerns about teeth grinding or clenching, it is crucial to recognise bruxism as a sign, rather than a diagnosis in itself.
Not everyone who grinds their teeth requires treatment. If a patient’s partner reports nocturnal grinding, but they wake refreshed without pain, and have no evidence of dental wear, muscle tenderness, or joint dysfunction, they require reassurance, not treatment.
Bruxism becomes clinically significant when it is associated with pain, TMJ dysfunction, or damage to the teeth.
Patients may report pain or tightness in the masseter, pre-auricular area (TMJ), or temporalis regions, often most noticeable on waking, together with morning jaw stiffness, fatigue, or temporal headaches.
Functional impairment may also be evident.
This could include:
In some cases, dental changes provide additional clues. These include chipped or worn incisal edges, flattened occlusal surfaces, and/or damage to dental restorations. When these features are present, bruxism is no longer a benign behavioural habit but a clinically significant process requiring assessment with a dentist and, where appropriate, intervention.
In some contexts, bruxism may even be protective. For example, during gastro-oesophageal reflux, nocturnal clenching may stimulate saliva flow to neutralise acid; in obstructive sleep apnoea, jaw protrusion may transiently maintain airway patency. In such cases, bruxism is a sign of another condition, and management should focus on the underlying disorder.
Multiple factors can trigger or exacerbate bruxism and TMD. Substances such as alcohol (especially before sleep), caffeine, tobacco, amphetamines, cocaine, and SSRIs can increase risk. Sleep disorders including snoring, obstructive sleep apnoea, parasomnias, restless legs, and chronic insomnia are common associations.
Neurological conditions such as ADHD, epilepsy, Parkinson’s, and traumatic brain injury are also linked.
Stress is a recognised risk factor but is often over-attributed. While psychosocial stress contributes to muscle tension and bruxism, GPs should also consider concurrent medical, neurological, or sleep-related causes. Identifying and addressing these factors can help manage symptoms and reduce the risk of dysfunction.
Ask about jaw, temple, or pre-auricular pain or stiffness, particularly on waking, and temporal headaches, or jaw fatigue. Inquire about locking, catching, or clicking of the TMJs, reduced mouth opening, teeth wear or chipping, and any damage to restorations. Screen for sleep related breathing disorders (snoring, witnessed apnoeas, unrefreshing sleep), reflux, medication and substance use, and psychosocial stressors.
On examination, palpate the masseter, temporalis, and TMJ for tenderness or pain. Assess mouth opening, as typical adults open about 50 mm; less than 25 mm (around two fingers) suggests dysfunction. Observe for deviation on opening or TMJ clicking or crepitation, and inspect teeth for wear, acknowledging that wear may reflect past rather than current activity.
The diagnosis of sleep bruxism is based on history and examination. A level one sleep study with audiovisual recording is the established gold standard, but it is rarely required outside research settings or when sleep disorders such as obstructive sleep apnoea are suspected. Ambulatory devices for multi-night monitoring are emerging but are not yet mainstream. Imaging with MRI or CT of the TMJs is not routinely required and should be considered only in selected cases, such as in a persistent closed-locked jaw due to disc displacement without reduction, or when structural changes within the joint are suspected. Routine imaging seldom changes management and can lead to overdiagnosis.
Most patients benefit from education and reassurance that TMDs are self-limiting conditions and respond well to conservative management. TMDs rarely progress to a chronic disabling condition. Advise a soft diet during painful flares, avoiding hard or chewy foods. Encourage awareness of daytime habits such as nail biting, gum chewing, chin resting, and sustained tooth contact. Simple relaxation cues, such as using a visual prompt to drop the shoulders, can reduce jaw tension. If applicable, stress management strategies should be considered.
Gentle stretching exercises can be performed by resting the tongue on the palate and slowly opening the mouth to a comfortable maximum, holding for six seconds and repeating several times a day. If nocturnal bruxism or tooth wear is evident, a custom occlusal splint can protect the teeth and reduce muscle and joint loading. Short courses of NSAIDs (diclofenac, naproxen, or celecoxib if tolerated) or paracetamol may help during acute episodes. Benzodiazepines are not recommended.
A small subset of TMD patients develops chronic pain due to central sensitisation (nociplastic pain). Predictors include widespread pain syndromes such as low-back or pelvic pain, migraine, irritable bowel syndrome, chronic fatigue, insomnia, adverse childhood experiences, anxiety, and depression. Management requires a biopsychosocial approach, addressing sleep, activity, nutrition, psychosocial context, and stress.
Referral for psychological or pain-specialist input is appropriate where distress, poor coping, or insomnia persist. Membrane stabilising medications such as tricyclic antidepressants and gabapentanoids may help selected patients. Conservative measures such as jaw stretching, occlusal splint therapy, and NSAIDs or paracetamol for flare-ups may continue if beneficial, but irreversible dental or surgical interventions are discouraged.
Referral is guided by the presenting features and underlying contributing factors:
Patients often seek confirmation that their pain is real and manageable. Validating the experience while emphasising the benign and self-limiting nature of most TMD is key. Explain that bruxism is a common behaviour and that pain can occur without visible joint or imaging abnormalities, as pain arises from the somatosensory system rather than structural damage alone. Emphasise that most jaw pain improves with conservative care, and the goal is to limit jaw overuse, relieve symptoms, and restore function.
Based on this educational activity, complete these learning modules to gain additional CPD.

Why is LDL control important?

Malnutrition and frailty in older adults - The importance of screening and early intervention

Heart failure and obesity - Which do we manage first?

The social media ban - Practical preparation for children and family

writer
Oral Medicine Specialist; Associate Professor and Discipline Lead in Oral Medicine, Dental School, University of Western Australia

Very overestimated
Moderately/slightly overestimated
Quite accurate
Moderately/slightly underestimated
Very underestimated
Listen to expert interviews.
Click to open in a new tab
Browse the latest articles from Healthed.
Once you confirm you’ve read this article you can complete a Patient Case Review to earn 0.5 hours CPD in the Reviewing Performance (RP) category.
Select ‘Confirm & learn‘ when you have read this article in its entirety and you will be taken to begin your Patient Case Review.
