填补空白。理解颞下颌关节紊乱症患者的生活:反思性主题分析。

IF 2.2 Q2 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE JDR Clinical & Translational Research Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-03 DOI:10.1177/23800844231216652
C Penlington, J Durham, N O'Brien, R Green
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:持续性疼痛的颞下颌关节紊乱症(TMD)在治疗上具有挑战性,通常需要患者的积极参与。为此,有必要了解持续性疼痛的复杂性和多因素性。许多牙科专业人员对顽固性疼痛知之甚少,他们可能更愿意提供结构性管理和建议。本研究旨在探讨人们如何理解其持续性 TMD,以及这种理解如何受到其治疗提供者的影响:研究招募了 21 人,他们代表了不同的 TMD 患者。访谈按照半结构化主题指南进行。通过反思性主题分析构建了主题,以反映人们如何理解自己的症状以及他们在治疗过程中获得的信息:结果:参与者描述了意见冲突和管理建议不一致的例子。他们很少回忆起就其症状的性质和复杂性以及不同的治疗方案进行合作讨论的情况。这种经历体现在一个主题中,即 "医疗旋转木马"。副主题 "无处可去的医疗之旅--参与者沮丧地试图找到能结束疼痛的医疗方法 "和 "是我的问题吗?--参与者质疑自己在持续疼痛中的角色 "让参与者继续在旋转木马上旋转,而症状的解决和参与者对 TMD 疼痛的整体理解的发展则提供了出口。从整体上理解疼痛往往很有帮助,而且通常是在常规治疗环境中提出建议后才发生的:本研究的参与者通常认为,牙科和医疗机构的疼痛治疗并没有帮助他们构建意义和理解 TMD 疼痛的经历。然而,从整体上理解症状对他们是有益的。本研究表明,改善针对顽固性 TMD 的服务中的沟通和指引可能对 TMD 疼痛患者有益:本研究的结果证实,对持续性疼痛症状提供一系列基于解剖学的、单一原因的解释,对寻求 TMD 帮助的参与者来说是无益的。参与者强调了准确和合作交流的重要性,以及牙科专业人员明确采用并向 TMD 患者传达对疼痛的生物-心理-社会理解的重要性。研究结果表明,有些人可能会在极少支持的情况下努力控制持续疼痛。向患者介绍适当的服务和资源可帮助他们进一步了解持续性疼痛的性质以及控制疼痛的方法。
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Filling in the Gaps. Making Sense of Living with Temporomandibular Disorders: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis.

Introduction: Persistent, painful temporomandibular disorders (TMDs) are challenging to manage and usually require the active engagement of patients. To achieve this, it is necessary to understand the complex and multifactorial nature of persistent pain. Many dental professionals have little education about persistent pain and may prefer to offer structural management and advice. This research aims to explore how people understand their persistent TMD and how this understanding has been influenced by their treatment providers.

Methods: Twenty-one people were recruited to represent a diversity of experience with persistent TMD. Interviews followed a semistructured topic guide. Themes were constructed through reflexive thematic analysis to represent how people made sense of their symptoms and the messages that they had picked up through their treatment journey.

Results: Participants described examples of conflicting opinions and inconsistent management recommendations. They rarely recalled collaborative discussions about the nature and complexity of their symptoms and different options for treatment. This experience is represented by a single theme, "a medical merry-go-round." Subthemes of "a medical journey to nowhere-participants' frustrated attempts to find medical management that will end their pain" and "is it me?-participants' questioning their role in persisting pain" kept participants on the merry-go-round, while symptom resolution and participants' emerging development of a holistic understanding of their TMD pain provided exit points. Understanding pain holistically tended to be helpful and typically occurred despite rather than because of the advice given in routine treatment settings.

Conclusion: Participants in this study had not typically found their pain management within dental and medical settings to have helped them to construct meaning and understand their experiences of painful TMD. However, understanding symptoms holistically was experienced as beneficial. This study suggests that improved communication and signposting within services for persistent TMD may be beneficial to patients with TMD pain.

Knowledge transfer statement: Results of this study confirm that being offered a series of anatomically based, singular-cause explanations for persisting pain symptoms had been experienced as unhelpful by the participants who had sought help for their TMD. Participants highlighted the importance of accurate and collaborative communication and of dental professionals explicitly adopting and communicating a biopsychosocial understanding of pain to their patients who have TMD. Results highlight that some people can struggle to manage persisting pain with minimal support. Signposting patients to appropriate services and resources may help them to understand more about the nature of persistent pain and methods of managing it.

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来源期刊
JDR Clinical & Translational Research
JDR Clinical & Translational Research DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE-
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: JDR Clinical & Translational Research seeks to publish the highest quality research articles on clinical and translational research including all of the dental specialties and implantology. Examples include behavioral sciences, cariology, oral & pharyngeal cancer, disease diagnostics, evidence based health care delivery, human genetics, health services research, periodontal diseases, oral medicine, radiology, and pathology. The JDR Clinical & Translational Research expands on its research content by including high-impact health care and global oral health policy statements and systematic reviews of clinical concepts affecting clinical practice. Unique to the JDR Clinical & Translational Research are advances in clinical and translational medicine articles created to focus on research with an immediate potential to affect clinical therapy outcomes.
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