Sleep Apnea–Hypopnea Syndrome and Sleep Bruxism: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- Patient: a person with SB and concomitant SAHS;
- Intervention: pathophysiological relationships and common clinical picture according to common diagnostic methods (self-survey, examination, and PSG);
- Comparison: signs/symptoms and differential findings;
- Outcome: improved diagnostic efficiency of SB and SAHS;
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- SB and SAHS seem to have a certain concomitance, ranging between 20% and 40%. The most widespread causal relationship suggests that hypoxemia resulting from SAHS causes a micro-awakening, and the RMMA in SB is generated to protect the sleep cycle from a drop in the level of oxygen. To corroborate this conclusion, more quality literature is needed that deals with the relationship between SB and SAHS.
- The prototypical at-risk patient appears to be an obese adult man of advanced age, and the main shared signs and symptoms are poor sleep quality, mouth breathing, nocturnal snoring, a preference for a supine sleeping position, and morning headaches. The dentist has a fundamental role in screening but has to work in an interdisciplinary team since very few dentists have sufficient training in dental sleep medicine.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author(s) and Year | Type of Study | Objective | M&M | Parameters | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jokubauskas and Baltrušaitytė 2017 [29] | Systematic review | Linking SB and SAHS | Bibliography | 3 articles | Further studies are needed to understand why bruxism occurs after a micro-awakening following an SAHS event with hypoxemia. |
Da Costa Lopes 2020 et al. [30] | Systematic review | Relationship between SAHS and SB | Bibliography | 7 articles | There is no scientific evidence to support a conclusive link between SB and SAHS. More studies are needed. |
Authors and Year | Type of Study | Objective | M&M | Parameters | Risk of Bias | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hosoya et al. 2014 [31] | CS | Linking SB, SAHS, and awakenings | PSG on 67 SAHS patients and 16 healthy patients (control group) for 1 night | Electroencephalogram, electrooculogram, electromyogram, respiratory flow, snoring, respiratory movements of the abdomen, saturation of oxygen, and electrocardiogram | Moderate (selection bias) | Patients with SAHS are at high risk of SB. This is the first report linking phasic type SB (eccentric) with obstructive apnea events. Improvement of SAHS could prevent exacerbation of SB. |
Saito et al. 2016 [32] | CS | Linking apnea and bruxism | PSG and recording of 59 participants for 1 night | RMMA and awakenings | Moderate (attrition bias) | There is no association between RMMA and awakenings, most movements during apnea are non-rhythmic, and SAHS and SB are related by some type of mechanism. |
Tan et al. 2019 [33] | Retrospective CS | Determine the prevalence of SB in patients with SAHS | PSG on 147 patients diagnosed with SB (SBI > 4) for 1 night | Micro-awakenings, DOI, AHI | High (selection bias) | One-third of the patients had both SB and SAHS. They presented more micro-arousals; therefore, RMMA may be related as a protective phenomenon against hypoxemia-related micro-arousals. |
Smardz et al. 2020 [34] | CS | SB and SAHS relationship | 77 patients with suspected SB undergoing PSG and EMG for 1 night | BEI, the type of RMMA, AHI and DOI | High (selection bias, performance bias) | Tonic contractions are related to SAHS events. |
Suzuki et al. 2020 [35] | Retrospective CS | Relationship between SB and fluctuation of O2 and CO2 | PSG and EMG for 1 night on 12 patients | RMMA, changes in O2 saturation, exhaled CO2, and apnea and hypopnea events | High (selection bias) | Before an RMMA, the O2 saturation drops, but this does not affect the CO2 expelled. The relationship between SAHS and SB is physiological. |
Authors and Year | Type of Study | Objective | M&M | Parameters | Risk of Bias | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tachibana et al. 2016 [36] | CS | To examine the prevalence of sleep bruxism in children in Japan, and its connections to sleep-related factors and daytime problematic behavior | Japanese Sleep Questionnaire for parents and caregivers of 6023 children aged 2–12 years | SAHS, restless legs syndrome, morning symptoms, sleep habits, parasomnias, insufficient sleep, excessive daytime sleepiness, daytime behavior, and insomnia or circadian rhythm disorders. | Low | In total, 21% of children have SB. SB is related to obstructive SAHS through the following symptomatology: night movement, mouth breathing, the head being in a backward position, snoring, apnea–hypopnea, and wheezing. |
Laganà et al. 2021 [37] | Cross-sectional CS | Relation between SB and SAHS risk factors | Questionnaires for both parents of 310 children | Personal data, sleep quality, and risk factors for SAHS | Low | In total, 41.3% of the sample had SB and 46.5% of the parents did not know what SB was. Risk factors for SAHS—such as heredity, night sweats, nocturia, mouth breathing, and snoring—seem to correlate with bruxism. |
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González González, A.; Montero, J.; Gómez Polo, C. Sleep Apnea–Hypopnea Syndrome and Sleep Bruxism: A Systematic Review. J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 910. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030910
González González A, Montero J, Gómez Polo C. Sleep Apnea–Hypopnea Syndrome and Sleep Bruxism: A Systematic Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023; 12(3):910. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030910
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález González, Ana, Javier Montero, and Cristina Gómez Polo. 2023. "Sleep Apnea–Hypopnea Syndrome and Sleep Bruxism: A Systematic Review" Journal of Clinical Medicine 12, no. 3: 910. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030910
APA StyleGonzález González, A., Montero, J., & Gómez Polo, C. (2023). Sleep Apnea–Hypopnea Syndrome and Sleep Bruxism: A Systematic Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 12(3), 910. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12030910