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. 2019 Sep;23(9):3471-3477.
doi: 10.1007/s00784-018-2765-7. Epub 2018 Dec 19.

Association of somatosensory dysfunction with symptom duration in burning mouth syndrome

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Association of somatosensory dysfunction with symptom duration in burning mouth syndrome

Kosuke Watanabe et al. Clin Oral Investig. 2019 Sep.

Abstract

Objectives: A standardized battery of quantitative sensory tests developed by the German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain (DFNS) was used to assess the association between somatosensory dysfunction and disease duration in patients with burning mouth syndrome (BMS).

Materials and methods: The 28 female participants with BMS were classified according to disease duration: ≤ 6 months (subchronic BMS, n = 15) and > 6 months (chronic BMS, n = 13); 29 age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers (control group) were recruited from staff of a dental hospital. The DFNS quantitative sensory testing protocol was applied at the ulnar surface of the right forearm and the tip of the tongue. Values for BMS patients and controls were compared and analyzed.

Results: The mechanical detection threshold (MDT) was significantly higher (i.e., loss of sensation) at the tongue tip in the chronic BMS group than in the control group (p = 0.011), whereas mechanical pain sensitivity (MPS) at the forearm was significantly higher (i.e., gain of sensation) in the chronic BMS group than in the control group (Z score = - 2.13 and 1.99, respectively). Multivariate analyses revealed that BMS patients could be discriminated from controls by using pressure pain threshold at the tongue (79.3%) (in the subchronic BMS group) and by MDT and MPS at the tongue tip and MPS at the forearm (96.6 and 89.7%, respectively) (in the chronic BMS group).

Conclusions: In BMS patients with long disease duration, MDT showed loss of sensation.

Clinical relevance: Increased MPS suggests that a neuropathic mechanism in the peripheral and central nervous systems is involved in BMS development.

Keywords: Burning mouth syndrome; German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain; Quantitative sensory testing.

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