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Self-assessed competence in relation to bruxism among undergraduate dental students in Finland

Jaana Näsänen, Terhi Karaharju‐Suvanto, Frank Lobbezoo, Merel C. Verhoeff, O-P Lappalainen, Lasse Nykänen

2025CRANIO®8 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Bruxism is repetitive masticatory muscle activity occurring during sleep or wakefulness. Once considered purely harmful, it is now recognized as having both risk (e.g., tooth wear, TMD) and protective roles (e.g., against sleep apnea, reflux). This study evaluated Finnish dental students' understanding of modern bruxism concepts and management. METHODS: A 17-question survey was sent to all Finnish dental students (n = 1000), with 220 responses analyzed using SPSS (version 28) via chi-square and Spearman correlation tests. RESULTS: Knowledge improved with study progression (p < .001), and students with formal bruxism education answered more accurately (p < .001). However, misconceptions about occlusion as a cause increased with study progression (p = .009) and instruction hours (p = .018). CONCLUSION: While Finnish dental students demonstrate growing bruxism knowledge, outdated beliefs persist. Universities should update curricula with evidence-based content and promote critical evaluation of bruxism-related information.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyCompetence (human resources)Medical educationDentistryMathematics educationMedicineSocial psychologyTemporomandibular Joint DisordersMusicians’ Health and PerformanceOrthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
Self-assessed competence in relation to bruxism among undergraduate dental students in Finland | Litcius