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Bruxism and Temporal Bone Hypermobility In Patients with MS

Posted: Thu Apr 04, 2013 10:50 pm
by dania

Re: Bruxism and Temporal Bone Hypermobility In Patients with

Posted: Fri Apr 05, 2013 5:35 am
by dania
Multiple sclerosis and Bruxism: a study of 53 patients

This is a real world study of Bruxism among people who have Multiple sclerosis, regardless of which drug or any drug is taken. The study is created by eHealthMe based on 53 reports from FDA. In total 201,897 Multiple sclerosis patients are studied.

For patients like me, how are my drugs? On eHealthMe, you can check 40 million side effects and drug interactions reported to FDA since 1977. All studies are personalized to gender and age, and have long term drug effects. What people like me (or like my patient) have reported my drugs? Check now, it's SIMPLE & FREE

Multiple sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis are typically treated by Copaxone, Tysabri, Avonex, Rebif, Betaseron, Baclofen. Common symptoms and complications include fatigue, multiple sclerosis relapse, weakness, fall, headache, urinary tract infection.
Bruxism

Bruxism has been reported by people with osteoporosis, depression, stress and anxiety, osteopenia, pain. It is also reported by people who take Fosamax, Paxil, Zometa, Zoloft, Effexor.

On Mar, 11, 2013: 201,897 people who have multiple sclerosis are studied. Among them, 53 (0.03%) have Bruxism.
Trend of Bruxism in multiple sclerosis reports
Gender of people who have multiple sclerosis and experienced Bruxism * :
Female Male
Bruxism 77.59% 22.41%
Age of people who have multiple sclerosis and experienced Bruxism * :
0-1 2-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+
Bruxism 0.00% 1.85% 0.00% 1.85% 16.67% 24.07% 29.63% 25.93%
Top co-existing conditions for these people * :

Multiple sclerosis and Bruxism: a study of 53 patients

This is a real world study of Bruxism among people who have Multiple sclerosis, regardless of which drug or any drug is taken. The study is created by eHealthMe based on 53 reports from FDA. In total 201,897 Multiple sclerosis patients are studied.

For patients like me, how are my drugs? On eHealthMe, you can check 40 million side effects and drug interactions reported to FDA since 1977. All studies are personalized to gender and age, and have long term drug effects. What people like me (or like my patient) have reported my drugs? Check now, it's SIMPLE & FREE

Multiple sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis are typically treated by Copaxone, Tysabri, Avonex, Rebif, Betaseron, Baclofen. Common symptoms and complications include fatigue, multiple sclerosis relapse, weakness, fall, headache, urinary tract infection.
Bruxism

Bruxism has been reported by people with osteoporosis, depression, stress and anxiety, osteopenia, pain. It is also reported by people who take Fosamax, Paxil, Zometa, Zoloft, Effexor.

On Mar, 11, 2013: 201,897 people who have multiple sclerosis are studied. Among them, 53 (0.03%) have Bruxism.
Trend of Bruxism in multiple sclerosis reports
Gender of people who have multiple sclerosis and experienced Bruxism * :
Female Male
Bruxism 77.59% 22.41%
Age of people who have multiple sclerosis and experienced Bruxism * :
0-1 2-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+
Bruxism 0.00% 1.85% 0.00% 1.85% 16.67% 24.07% 29.63% 25.93%
Top co-existing conditions for these people * :

Multiple sclerosis (53 people, 100.00%)
Insomnia (8 people, 15.09%)
Depression (7 people, 13.21%)
Convulsion (6 people, 11.32%)
Anxiety (5 people, 9.43%)
Contraception (5 people, 9.43%)
Abnormal behaviour (3 people, 5.66%)
Crying (3 people, 5.66%)
Hallucination (3 people, 5.66%)
Epilepsy (2 people, 3.77%)

Most common drugs used by these people * :

Avonex (20 people, 37.74%)
Tysabri (13 people, 24.53%)
Betaseron (11 people, 20.75%)
Zocor (8 people, 15.09%)
Synthroid (7 people, 13.21%)
Rebif (6 people, 11.32%)
Lamictal (6 people, 11.32%)
Klonopin (6 people, 11.32%)
Neurontin (6 people, 11.32%)
Amitril (5 people, 9.43%)

http://www.ehealthme.com/cs/multiple+sclerosis/bruxism

Re: Bruxism and Temporal Bone Hypermobility In Patients with

Posted: Wed May 09, 2018 9:54 pm
by ANothingNobody
Link is dead. Here's another one that works:

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/c8e4/3 ... 8bb9c3.pdf

And some more info on how bruxism could be causing MS:

www.houseofenoch.com/diseases/multiple-sclerosis/