睡眠磨牙症的神经生物学机制。

G J Lavigne, T Kato, A Kolta, B J Sessle
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引用次数: 514

摘要

据报道,8%的成年人患有睡眠磨牙症(SB),主要与有节奏的咀嚼肌活动(RMMA)有关,其特征是颚肌重复收缩(频率为1hz的3次或更多)。SB的后果可能包括牙齿破坏、下颚疼痛、头痛或下颌活动受限,以及磨牙声,扰乱床伴的睡眠。SB可能是大多数正常人睡眠时发生的咀嚼肌活动的一种极端表现,因为60%的正常睡眠者在没有研磨声的情况下观察到RMMA。SB的病理生理学正在变得越来越清晰,并且有大量的证据概述了与咀嚼、吞咽和呼吸有关的节律性下颌运动(RJM)的神经生理学和神经化学。睡眠文献提供了大量证据,描述了从睡眠开始到以快速眼动(REM)睡眠为特征的肌张力下降的机制。一些脑干结构(如网状口桥、尾桥、细胞旁桥)和神经化学物质(如血清素、多巴胺、γ -氨基丁酸[GABA]、去甲肾上腺素)参与了RJM的发生和睡眠时肌肉张力的调节。目前尚不清楚为什么在正常受试者中有高比例的人在睡眠期间出现RMMA,以及为什么在SB患者中这种活动的频率和幅度是正常人的三倍。同样不清楚的是,为什么睡眠时的RMMA以开颌肌和闭颌肌共同激活为特征,而不是咀嚼时的开颌肌和闭颌肌交替活动模式。本综述的最后一部分提出,睡眠期间的RMMA具有润滑上消化道和增加气道通畅的作用。这篇综述最后概述了未来研究的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Neurobiological mechanisms involved in sleep bruxism.

Sleep bruxism (SB) is reported by 8% of the adult population and is mainly associated with rhythmic masticatory muscle activity (RMMA) characterized by repetitive jaw muscle contractions (3 bursts or more at a frequency of 1 Hz). The consequences of SB may include tooth destruction, jaw pain, headaches, or the limitation of mandibular movement, as well as tooth-grinding sounds that disrupt the sleep of bed partners. SB is probably an extreme manifestation of a masticatory muscle activity occurring during the sleep of most normal subjects, since RMMA is observed in 60% of normal sleepers in the absence of grinding sounds. The pathophysiology of SB is becoming clearer, and there is an abundance of evidence outlining the neurophysiology and neurochemistry of rhythmic jaw movements (RJM) in relation to chewing, swallowing, and breathing. The sleep literature provides much evidence describing the mechanisms involved in the reduction of muscle tone, from sleep onset to the atonia that characterizes rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Several brainstem structures (e.g., reticular pontis oralis, pontis caudalis, parvocellularis) and neurochemicals (e.g., serotonin, dopamine, gamma aminobutyric acid [GABA], noradrenaline) are involved in both the genesis of RJM and the modulation of muscle tone during sleep. It remains unknown why a high percentage of normal subjects present RMMA during sleep and why this activity is three times more frequent and higher in amplitude in SB patients. It is also unclear why RMMA during sleep is characterized by co-activation of both jaw-opening and jaw-closing muscles instead of the alternating jaw-opening and jaw-closing muscle activity pattern typical of chewing. The final section of this review proposes that RMMA during sleep has a role in lubricating the upper alimentary tract and increasing airway patency. The review concludes with an outline of questions for future research.

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