Psychiatric comorbidities in patients with Atypical Odontalgia

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2017.11.001Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Depression and anxiety disorders are the most common comorbidities in AO patients.

  • Specific questionnaires might help to notice underlying psychiatric disorders.

  • Pain might have a larger emotional component than a sensory one in patients with psychiatric-disorders.

  • Dental procedures are not necessarily causative factors of AO.

  • A little difference pathophysiology might exist between AO and PIFP.

Abstract

Objective

Atypical Odontalgia (AO) is a condition characterized by tooth pain with no apparent cause. Although psychiatric comorbidity seems to be very common, it has rarely been studied. To clarify the influence of psychiatric comorbidity on the clinical features in patients with AO, we retrospectively evaluated their examination records.

Methods

Clinical features and psychiatric diagnoses of 383 patients with AO were investigated by reviewing patients' medical records and referral letters. Psychiatric diagnoses were categorized according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5). We also analyzed visual analogue scale (VAS), self-rating depression scale (SDS), and the short-form McGill pain questionnaire (SF-MPQ) scores.

Results

Of the 383 patients with AO, 177 (46.2%) had comorbid psychiatric disorders. The most common were depressive disorders (15.4%) and anxiety disorders (10.1%). Serious psychotic disorders such as bipolar disorder (3.0%) and schizophrenia (1.8%) were rare. Dental trigger of AO was reported in 217 (56.7%) patients. There were no significant correlations between psychiatric comorbidities and most of the demographic features. Higher VAS and SDS scores, higher frequency of sleep disturbance, and higher ratings of “Fearful” and “Punishing-cruel” descriptors of the SF-MPQ were found in patients with psychiatric comorbidity.

Conclusions

About half of AO patients had comorbid psychiatric disorders. Dental procedures are not necessarily causative factors of AO. In AO patients with comorbid psychiatric disorders, pain might have a larger emotional component than a sensory one. VAS, SDS, and SF-MPQ scores might aid in the noticing of underlying comorbid psychiatric disorders in AO patients.

Keywords

Atypical odontalgia
Psychiatric comorbidity
Persistent idiopathic facial pain, orofacial pain
Depression

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