Dr. Shapira's Chicago Headache Blog

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Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Dental Implants, Missing Teeth and Headaches

Patients missing one or more permanent molars are more prone to headaches and TMJ disorders. Missing just a single first molar has been shown to double the resk of headaches, sinus pain and /TMJ disorders. When the molars are missing there can be drastic increases in headaches and TMJ disorders. Patients with loss of vertical dimension are more prone to morning headaches, sleep apnea and migraines.

Dental Implants are frerquently used to replace missing teeth when treating headaches and migraines associated with TMJ diorders.

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posted by Dr Shapira at 3:10 PM

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Neuromuscular Dentistry treats Migraines, Tension-Type Headaches, Chronic Daily Headaches and Sinus Pain related to Trigeminal Nerve and TMJ Disorders

Chronic pain is frequently multifactorial in nature. Neuromuscular dentistry has been very successful in treating TMD, Migrines, Tension Type headaches and other disorders. Frequently it is not a total cure but 50-80% reduction in pain is usually attained within several visits. There are many disorders and symptoms associated with TMD including:
Ear Aches or Otalgia
Sinus Pain
TM Joint Clicking and Popping
Ear Stuffiness or Eustacian Tube Dysfunction
Dizziness
Vertigo
Temporal Pain
Occipital Headaches
Morning Headaches
Sleep Apnea
Snoring
Sore Throats
Neck pain or stiffness
Feelings of a foriegn object in the throat
Pain in or behind the eyes
Scalp pain or feeling like your hair hurts

Most of these symptoms are mediated by the Trigeminal nerve and the Trigeminovaqscular system. These Nerves also connect to facial nerves, occipital nerves, glossopharyngeal nerves and to the autonomic nervous system. What happens in these nerves cause biochemical changes in the brain. Recent stuies shown the neural plasticity can create permanent changes in the brain. If chronic pain is the stimulus it can lead to central sensitization.

Changes inthe brain can be reversed over time but the exact amount of recovery will vary with individual patients genotypes, how long the pain has been present , other comorbidities that the patient carries. Some patients experience immediate3 and almost miraculous pain relief while others have a slower longer version of recovery. I always tell my patients to work for 50 - 80% improvement in pain. That is then our new starting point and we again seek 50 - *0 % reduction in pain.

There is "no cure" for long term chronic pain because lives have been changed due to living with pain. A cure would require a do-over of the years you had pain. There are no do-overs therefore we look to improve your future quality of life to the maximum. Some patients still have to do exercises or watch diet or even continue different medications. Other patients have remarkably and incredible improvements as described by Dr Barry Cooper in Cranio where he talked about "overwhelming success". This is why we use a diagnostic orthotic as the first step of treatment. We try to avoid permanent changes until the patient feels substantially improved. This is not a judgement that any doctor can make for the patient. It is a subjective evaluation by the patient themselves. Only the patient knows how well or poorly they are doing. We may have objective data showing physical improvement but the final test is have we improved or dramatically improved the patients quality of life. If the answer is yes we can talk about long term stabilization. The diagnostic orthotic is the first phase of treatment for those patients.

If the patient has improvement, whether it is only 25-30% or if they are at 80-90% the decision that the diagnostic orthotic treatment is successful remains the patient's. If they do not feel sufficiently improved they should not feel pressured into continuing treatment or making permanent changes. You should treat the diagnostic orthotic like a CAT SCAN or MRI but instead of images we have improvement in the quality of life. If improvement is not sufficient then a diagnostic approach should continue.

While NEUROMUSCULAR DENTISTRY IS REMARKABLY EFFECTIVE AT TREATING MANY CONDITIONS THERE ARE OTHER CONDITIONS THAT ARE NOT RELATED TO THE TRIGEMINAL NERVOUS SYSTEM, MYOFASCIAL PAIN OR JAW JOINTS.

TMJ disorders are frequently called The Great Imposter ("SUFFER NO MORE: DEALING WITH THE GREAT IMPOSTER" IS A MUST READ FOR ANY PATIENTS WITH MIGRAINES OR TMD http://www.sleepandhealth.com/story/suffer-no-more-dealing-great-impostor) but we must remember that other disorders can also masquerade or more frequently coexist with these problems. Many times a diagnostic orthotic relieves many of the symptoms but the remaining symptoms have a different cause. The expression that "you can't see the forest for the trees" applies. When the majority of symptoms are relieved you now find that you can identify a particular problem that was lost in a long and winding maze of symptoms. As NMD unravels the maze a specific problem can now be identified and treated.

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posted by Dr Shapira at 5:12 PM

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Thyroid problems,sleep disordrs, headache and Neuromuscular Dentistry

Patients with thyroid problems frequently also have headaches, TMJ disorders and sleep disorders. The treatment of pain disorders frequently is aided by normalization of thyroid hormone. Free T3 is the activ e form of thyroid hormone and appears to be the most important thyroid hormone when dealing with chronic pain problems.

In the midwest theree is low naturally occuring iodine in the water. Patients with low thyroid and high TSH can frequently be helped by nutritional supplements containing iodine. 1 of drop of iodine in 8 oz of water every other day may be enough iodine to allow the thyroid to function normally. Many years age the Panda bears in Washington DC were unable to conceive. My uncle Dr Al Lepkovsky determined it was because of low thyroid. He added iodine to the water their bamboo shoots were grown in and their thyroid normalized and the pandas conceived and gave birth. Unfortunately they rolled on to of baby pandas and suffocated them.

Low thyroid is frequently treated with synthroid. Synthroid is the inactive (T4) form of thyroid hormone and many people are unable to convert it to T# the active form of the hormone. High TSH will be reduced by taking synthroid even if the active T3 is not increased at all. It has recently become more difficult to get natural Armour thyroid and many patients are getting it from Canada or compounding pharmacies. This is due to a questionable ruling by the FDA questioning the safety of Armour Thyroid natural thyroid hormone in spite of a 100 year safety history.

Sleep disruption can also cause aberrations in thyroid hormone levels. Sleep apnea is one type of sleep disruption. See http://www.ihatecpap.com for more information on the dangers of sleep apnea and treatment alternatives.

The frequent headaches, migraines and chronic daily headaches can be helped by a neuromuscular dental orthotic and/or by stabilizing thyroid hormone, particularly Free T3.

Patients with chronic headaches and migraines should have a thyroid evaluation done as well as sleep testing and neuromuscular dental evaluation.

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posted by Dr Shapira at 8:08 PM

Monday, February 15, 2010

Article in Journal of American Osteopathic Association on role of trigeminal nerve in migraines. Why Osteopathy, Chiropractic, A/O and NUCCA work.

Osteopathic manipulation and Chiropractic manipulation both treat headaches by changing input into the trigeminal nerve much like neuromuscular dentistry does. The article states: " Pathologic findings in the neck constitute an accepted etiology or precipitant for headache. Osteopathic manipulative treatment may reduce pain input into the trigeminal nucleus caudalis, favorably altering neuromuscular-autonomic regulatory mechanisms to reduce discomfort from headache." The pathology in the neck is addressed to reduce pain (nociceptive) input into the trigeminal nucleus caudalis. The easiest and most direct method of reducing nociceptive input into the trigeminal nerve is a diagnostic orthotic followed by definitive long term treatment. The beauty of neuromuscular dentistry is that correcting the stomatognathic/ trigeminal system leads to auto correction of many neck problems.

The reason that NUCCA and A/O (atlas orthogonal) chiropractic is so effective when used in conjunction with a neuromuscular orthotic is that the chiropractic and/or osteopathic adjustments hold when the underlying masticatory pathology is adressed.



J Am Osteopath Assoc. 2007 Nov;107(10 Suppl 6):ES10-6.
Diagnosing and managing migraine headache.
Mueller LL.

University Headache Center, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-School of Osteopathic Medicine, 42 E Laurel Rd, University Doctors Pavilion, Ste 1700, Stratford, NJ 08084-1354, USA. SOMPhysicians@umdnj.edu
Comment in:

J Am Osteopath Assoc. 2008 Apr;108(4):191; author reply 191, 214.
Headache is one of the chief complaints among patients visiting primary care physicians. Diagnosis begins with exclusion of secondary causes for headache. More than 90% of patients will have a primary-type headache, so diagnosis can often be completed without further testing. Although tension-type headaches are the most common kind of headache, patients with this type of headache rarely seek treatment unless occurrence is daily. Migraine, which affects more than 30 million people in the United States, is the most common headache diagnosis for which patients seek treatment. Migraine is a chronic, often inherited condition involving brain hypersensitivity and a lowered threshold for trigeminal-vascular activation. Intermittent debilitating attacks are characterized by autonomic, gastrointestinal, and neurologic symptoms. Migraine results in a marked decrease in a patient's quality of life, as measured by physical, mental, and social health-related instruments. Accurate assessment of a patient's disability will guide physicians in prescribing appropriate modes of therapy. However, migraine remains underdiagnosed, and patients with migraine remain undertreated. A comprehensive treatment approach to migraine may include nonpharmacologic measures, as well as abortive and prophylactic medications. Informing patients about realistic treatment expectations, possible delayed efficacy of medications, and avoidance of caffeine and overuse of medications is critical for successful outcomes. Management of migraine is a dynamic process, because headaches evolve over time and medication tachyphylaxis may occur, necessitating changes in therapy. Pathologic findings in the neck constitute an accepted etiology or precipitant for headache. Osteopathic manipulative treatment may reduce pain input into the trigeminal nucleus caudalis, favorably altering neuromuscular-autonomic regulatory mechanisms to reduce discomfort from headache.

PMID: 17986672 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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posted by Dr Shapira at 8:17 PM

Neuromuscular dentistry at Delany Dental Care in Gurnee, Il

Check out my dental website for additional information on Neuromuscular Dentistry

http://www.delanydentalcare.com/neuromuscular.html

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posted by Dr Shapira at 1:36 AM

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