How Confinement and Back to Normal Affected theWell-Being and Thus Sleep, Headaches and Temporomandibular Disorders
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Rosales Leal, Juan Ignacio; Sánchez Vaca, Cristian; Ryaboshapka, Aleksandra; de Carlos Villafranca, Félix; Rubio Escudero, Miguel ÁngelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
COVID-19 Confinement New normal
Date
2023-01-28Referencia bibliográfica
Rosales Leal, J.I.; Sánchez Vaca, C.; Ryaboshapka, A.; de Carlos Villafranca, F.; Rubio Escudero, M.Á. How Confinement and Back to Normal Affected theWell-Being and Thus Sleep, Headaches and Temporomandibular Disorders. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 2340. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032340
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Research group #CTS-974 (Junta de Andalucía, Spain)Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is having negative consequences not only for people’s general
health but also for the masticatory system. This article aimed to assess confinement and its new
normal impact on well-being, sleep, headaches, and temporomandibular disorders (TMD). An
anonymous survey was distributed to a Spanish university community. Participants completed a
well-being index (WHO-5), a questionnaire related to sleep quality (the BEARS test), a headache
diagnostic test (the tension type headache (TTH) and migraine diagnosis test), and the DC-TMD
questionnaire. Questions were addressed in three scenarios: before confinement, during confinement,
and the new normal. A total of 436 responses were collected (70% women, 30% men). A reduction in
well-being and sleep quality was recorded. Respondents reported more TTH and migraines during
and after confinement. Overall, confinement and return to normal did not increase TMD symptoms,
and only minor effects were observed, such as more intense joint pain and a higher incidence of
muscle pain in women during confinement. Reduced well-being is correlated with sleep quality loss,
headaches, and TMD symptoms. This study provides evidence that pandemics and confinement
might have had a negative impact on population health. Well-being was strongly affected, as were
sleep quality, depression risk, TTH, and migraine frequency. In contrast, the temporomandibular
joint and muscles showed more resilience and were only slightly affected.