Litcius/Paper detail

Factors influencing the articular eminence of the temporomandibular joint (Review)

Maria Justina Roxana Vîrlan, Diana Loreta Păun, E.A. Bordea, Angelo M. Pellegrini, Arsenie Spînu, Roxana Ivaşcu, Victor Nimigean, Vanda Roxana Nimigean

2021Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The temporomandibular joint (TMJ), the most complex and evolved joint in humans, presents two articular surfaces: the condyle of the mandible and the articular eminence (AE) of the temporal bone. AE is the anterior root of the zygomatic process of the temporal bone and has an anterior and a posterior slope, the latter being also known as the articular surface. AE is utterly important in the biomechanics of the TMJ, as the mandibular condyle slides along the posterior slope of the AE while the mandible moves. The aim of this review was to assess significant factors influencing the inclination of the AE, especially modifications caused by aging, biological sex or edentulism. Studies have reported variations in the angles of the slopes of the AE between medieval and recent human dry skulls, as well as between subjects of different racial origin. Recent articles have emphasized the significant role that tooth loss has on the flattening of the AE. Although some papers have described biological sex or age as factors which could be associated with differences in AE angulations, edentulism seems to be a significant factor impacting on the inclination of the AE.

Topics & Concepts

EdentulismTemporomandibular jointCondyleMedicineBiomechanicsOrthodonticsMandible (arthropod mouthpart)DentistryTemporal boneAnatomyBiologyOral healthGenusBotanyTemporomandibular Joint DisordersOrthodontics and Dentofacial OrthopedicsOropharyngeal Anatomy and Pathologies