Title of article :
Trigeminal pain and quantitative sensory testing in painful peripheral diabetic neuropathy
Author/Authors :
Arap، نويسنده , , Astrid and Siqueira، نويسنده , , Silvia R.D.T. and Silva، نويسنده , , Claudomiro B. and Teixeira، نويسنده , , Manoel J. and Siqueira، نويسنده , , José T.T.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
8
From page :
486
To page :
493
Abstract :
Objective luate patients with Diabetes Mellitus type 2 and painful peripheral neuropathy in order to investigate oral complaints and facial somatosensory findings. ch design and methods ontrol study; 29 patients (12 women, mean age 57.86 yo) with Diabetes Mellitus type 2 and 31 age-gender-matched controls were evaluated with a standardized protocol for general characteristics, orofacial pain, research diagnostic criteria for temporomandibular disorders, visual analogue scale and McGill Pain questionnaire, and a systematic protocol of quantitative sensory testing for bilateral facial sensitivity at the areas innervated by the trigeminal branches, which included the thermal detection by ThermoSensi 2, tactile evaluation with vonFrey filaments, and superficial pain thresholds with a superficial algometer (Micromar). Statistical analysis was performed with Wilcoxon, chi-square, confidence intervals and Spearman (p < 0.05). s ial pain was reported by 55.2% of patients, and the most common descriptor was fatigue (50%); 17.2% had burning mouth. Myofascial temporomandibular disorders were diagnosed in 9 (31%) patients. The study group showed higher sensory thresholds of pain at the right maxillary branch (p = 0.017) but sensorial differences were not associated with pain (p = 0.608). Glycemia and HbA1c were positively correlated with the quantitative sensory testing results of pain (p < 0.05) and cold (p = 0.044) perceptions. Higher pain thresholds were correlated with higher glycemia and glycated hemoglobin (p = 0.027 and p = 0.026). sions was a high prevalence of orofacial pain and burning mouth was the most common complaint. The association of loss of pain sensation and higher glycemia and glycated hemoglobin can be of clinical use for the follow-up of DM complications.
Keywords :
Burning mouth , BMS , diabetes mellitus , QST , Orofacial pain , Trigeminal system , Diabetic neuropathy
Journal title :
Archives of Oral Biology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Archives of Oral Biology
Record number :
1805731
Link To Document :
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