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Temporomandibular Disorders
Author Bios
Introduction
Epidemiology
Currently selected section: Population Perspective
Developmental Perspective
Ecological Perspective
Epidemiologic Measures
Defining a Case
Pain Location
Currently selected section: Pain Frequency, Duration and Severity
Recency of Pain
Ambient Pain or Pain on Function?
Clinical Signs and Symptoms
Pain Impact/Disability
Co-morbidity
Choosing an Appropriate Design
Cross-sectional Surveys
Longitudinal Studies
Case-control Studies
Prospective Designs
Preventive and Clinical Trials
Clinical Epidemiology
Practical Considerations
Sample Size
Standardizing Data Collection
Response Burden
Summary

 

Chapter 26: Studying the Epidemiology of Temporomanibular Disorders: Pain Frequency, Duration and Severity
        

Many people experience fleeting pain in various body locations from time to time. A question that simply asks whether a person has experienced pain in the muscles of the face or the joint in front of the ear is likely to yield a number of "cases" whose pain is not very severe or long lasting. Thus, researchers who are interested in quantifying the burden of TMD in the population may wish to eliminate these short-lived, mild cases.

In one study (Von Korff et al., 1988) subjects were specifically asked not to report pain experiences that were fleeting or minor, and to report only pain that lasted a whole day or more or occurred several times in a year, i.e., a threshold based on either episode duration or episode frequency.

Other studies set a threshold using pain frequency as the only criterion. For example, Goulet et al. (1995) asked about TMD pain that occurred "often or very often," and List et al. (1999) considered as possible cases only those subjects who reported pain occurring once a week or more.

Such thresholds for severity and persistence can markedly change prevalence rates. As a practical matter, to keep questions from becoming too complicated, questions that inquire into the presence of pain are generally asked as "filter" questions, and then those who report pain are asked to rate the severity or persistence of the pain.

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