Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints

Abstract Background Sleep bruxism is a common parafunctional activity that can lead to progressive tooth wear and long-term restorative consequences. Although occlusal splints are widely used to prevent tooth surface loss, the extent of wear in splint-wearing patients remains insufficiently explored...

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Main Authors: Irene Laksamikeeratikul, Supawadee Jariyasakulroj, Thiprawee Chattrattrai, Sunee Pongrojpaw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-08-01
Series:BMC Oral Health
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-025-06716-6
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author Irene Laksamikeeratikul
Supawadee Jariyasakulroj
Thiprawee Chattrattrai
Sunee Pongrojpaw
author_facet Irene Laksamikeeratikul
Supawadee Jariyasakulroj
Thiprawee Chattrattrai
Sunee Pongrojpaw
author_sort Irene Laksamikeeratikul
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Sleep bruxism is a common parafunctional activity that can lead to progressive tooth wear and long-term restorative consequences. Although occlusal splints are widely used to prevent tooth surface loss, the extent of wear in splint-wearing patients remains insufficiently explored. This study aimed to evaluate volumetric tooth wear in canines and first molars among sleep bruxism patients treated with occlusal splints using digital intraoral scanning. Methods A prospective cohort of 16 patients (mean age 27.9 ± 4.5 years) diagnosed with sleep bruxism and wearing polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) upper occlusal splints was followed for 18 months. Intraoral scans were performed at baseline and follow-up using the TRIOS 4® scanner. Volumetric wear was assessed on the masticatory surfaces of upper and lower canines and first molars using best-fit superimposition and STL analysis software. Statistical comparisons of model volume between upper and lower teeth and between timepoints were performed using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test with a significant level of 0.05. Results All tooth groups showed statistically significant volumetric tooth reduction over 18 months (p < 0.001). However, no significant differences in wear were observed between the upper and lower arches for either canines (p = 0.940) or first molars (p = 0.207). Grinding-type bruxism was more prevalent than clenching-type in the cohort (11 grinding-type and 5 clenching-type patients). Conclusions While PMMA splints may help reduce tooth wear during sleep-related bruxism, measurable tooth wear still occurred. Therefore, effective management of sleep bruxism requires combining splint therapy with comprehensive strategies, such as behavioral and dietary counseling, and regular monitoring.
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spelling doaj-art-d57863926adb45bf90ca5f330e60be2a2025-08-24T11:54:56ZengBMCBMC Oral Health1472-68312025-08-012511710.1186/s12903-025-06716-6Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splintsIrene Laksamikeeratikul0Supawadee Jariyasakulroj1Thiprawee Chattrattrai2Sunee Pongrojpaw3Department of Masticatory Science, Faculty of Dentistry, Mahidol UniversityDepartment of Masticatory Science, Faculty of Dentistry, Mahidol UniversityDepartment of Masticatory Science, Faculty of Dentistry, Mahidol UniversityDepartment of Masticatory Science, Faculty of Dentistry, Mahidol UniversityAbstract Background Sleep bruxism is a common parafunctional activity that can lead to progressive tooth wear and long-term restorative consequences. Although occlusal splints are widely used to prevent tooth surface loss, the extent of wear in splint-wearing patients remains insufficiently explored. This study aimed to evaluate volumetric tooth wear in canines and first molars among sleep bruxism patients treated with occlusal splints using digital intraoral scanning. Methods A prospective cohort of 16 patients (mean age 27.9 ± 4.5 years) diagnosed with sleep bruxism and wearing polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) upper occlusal splints was followed for 18 months. Intraoral scans were performed at baseline and follow-up using the TRIOS 4® scanner. Volumetric wear was assessed on the masticatory surfaces of upper and lower canines and first molars using best-fit superimposition and STL analysis software. Statistical comparisons of model volume between upper and lower teeth and between timepoints were performed using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test with a significant level of 0.05. Results All tooth groups showed statistically significant volumetric tooth reduction over 18 months (p < 0.001). However, no significant differences in wear were observed between the upper and lower arches for either canines (p = 0.940) or first molars (p = 0.207). Grinding-type bruxism was more prevalent than clenching-type in the cohort (11 grinding-type and 5 clenching-type patients). Conclusions While PMMA splints may help reduce tooth wear during sleep-related bruxism, measurable tooth wear still occurred. Therefore, effective management of sleep bruxism requires combining splint therapy with comprehensive strategies, such as behavioral and dietary counseling, and regular monitoring.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-025-06716-6Sleep bruxismTooth wearOcclusal splintImagingThree-Dimensional
spellingShingle Irene Laksamikeeratikul
Supawadee Jariyasakulroj
Thiprawee Chattrattrai
Sunee Pongrojpaw
Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints
BMC Oral Health
Sleep bruxism
Tooth wear
Occlusal splint
Imaging
Three-Dimensional
title Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints
title_full Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints
title_fullStr Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints
title_full_unstemmed Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints
title_short Digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints
title_sort digital measurement of tooth wear in sleep bruxism patients wearing occlusal splints
topic Sleep bruxism
Tooth wear
Occlusal splint
Imaging
Three-Dimensional
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-025-06716-6
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AT thipraweechattrattrai digitalmeasurementoftoothwearinsleepbruxismpatientswearingocclusalsplints
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