A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Importance of the Graded Chronic Pain Scale as a Biopsychosocial Screening Instrument in TMD Pain Patient Subtyping




AuthorsHietaharju Maria, Napankangas Ritva, Sipilä Kirsi, Teerijoki-Oksa Tuija, Tanner Johanna, Kemppainen Pentti, Tolvanen Mimmi, Suvinen Tuija

PublisherQUINTESSENCE PUBLISHING CO INC

Publication year2021

JournalJournal of oral and facial pain and headache

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF ORAL & FACIAL PAIN AND HEADACHE

Journal acronymJ ORAL FACIAL PAIN H

Volume35

Issue4

First page 303

Last page316

Number of pages14

ISSN2333-0384

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.11607/ofph.2983

Web address http://quintpub.com/journals/ofph/abstract.php?iss2_id=1787&article_id=21971#.Ymjc6-1Bw2x


Abstract

Aims: To compare the suitability of Graded Chronic Pain Scale (GCPS) pain intensity and interference assessments (GCPS version 1.0 vs 2.0) for the biopsychosocial screening and subtyping of Finnish tertiary care referral patients with TMD pain.

Methods: Altogether, 197 TMD pain patients participated in this study. All patients received Axis II specialist-level psychosocial questionnaires from the Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Disorders (DC/TMD-FIN) and Research Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Disorders (RDC/TMD-FIN), as well as questionnaires for the assessment of additional pain-related, biopsychosocial, and treatment-related variables. Clinical examinations were performed according to the DC/TMD Axis I protocol. The patients were categorized into TMD subtypes 1, 2, and 3 (GCPS I and II-low; II-high; and III and IV, respectively) based on their biopsychosocial profiles according to GCPS versions 1.0 and 2.0.

Results: The distribution of TMD pain patients into TMD subtypes was similar according to the GCPS 1.0 compared to the GCPS 2.0. Over 50% of the patients were moderately (TMD subtype 2) or severely (TMD subtype 3) compromised. Patients in subtype 3 experienced biopsychosocial symptoms and reported previous health care visits significantly more often than patients in subtypes 1 and 2. Patients in subtype 2 reported intermediate biopsychosocial burden compared to subtypes 1 and 3.

Conclusion: TMD pain patients differ in their biopsychosocial profiles, and, similarly to the GCPS 1.0, the GCPS 2.0 is a suitable instrument for categorizing TMD tertiary care pain patients into three biopsychosocially relevant TMD subtypes. The GCPS 2.0 can be regarded as a suitable initial screening tool for adjunct personalized or comprehensive multidisciplinary assessment.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:17