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View Full Version : Anxiety can affect your body in ways you never imagined!!



Sarita94
15-06-16, 14:16
Hi everyone,
This is just a quick notice about something that happened to me today that I feel really illustrates the wide range of effects anxiety can have on our bodies.

I've had wisdom tooth problems for a while now, funnily enough I didn't have health anxiety over this, but I have had lots of infections, antibiotics, abscesses- you name it. One infection even went into the jaw and it was the most painful thing I ever experienced- one tooth was removed as an emergency to relieve pressure in my mouth. Anyway, my regular dentist is convinced they need to come out ASAP, and I had my appointment at the hospital today.

The specialist was lovely, he took one look in my mouth and said 'you're grinding your teeth!!'. Basically, my X-ray was fine, no decay, weird angles or anything. I'm grinding my teeth so heavily of a night, that i'm gnawing away part of my gum and crushing in pieces of remaining food/bacteria. He then asked me to tense the muscles in my mouth- he said they felt like they were popping out because they had gotten so big from the constant grinding!

The grinding is something that I was totally unaware of and so was my regular dentist. However, apparently it could also explain some of my headaches, neck pain and shoulder aches that I often obssess over. The specialist told me it is especially common in women and people that suffer from stress- when he asked me if I had ever had anxiety, I nearly laughed!

What i'm trying to say, is that anxiety can be at work subconsciously, even when we're completely not aware of it- like when we sleep. The specialist reckons that a good gum shield and perhaps shaving down my very sharp teeth might sort me out. Who would have thought?!
:)

J-P
16-06-16, 03:00
Hi everyone,

What i'm trying to say, is that anxiety can be at work subconsciously, even when we're completely not aware of it- like when we sleep. The specialist reckons that a good gum shield and perhaps shaving down my very sharp teeth might sort me out. Who would have thought?!
:)

Been there this winter, had chipped teeth and TMJ pain. Mouth guards do help if you get used to them, in my case it's been a total waste I hate wearing it.

MyNameIsTerry
16-06-16, 04:50
I had 6 months of Bruxism when I started on my current med. This gave me jaw pain, headaches, couldn't fully open my mouth or close my teeth together. The pain was always worse in the morning so my dentist said I was night grinding.

I had no idea but he had already worked it out by looking at my back teeth. He also checked my jaw muscles the same way and said they were enlarged.

I'm really surprised your regular dentist didn't spot this.

The headaches were one sided. The thing is, if you touch your fingertips to your temples and then clench your jaw, you will feel the muscles around the temples tighten too. That's why the headaches are there.

It took me a few months but I did stop the grinding in the end. Some of this is down to reducing overall anxiety levels too. I decided not to go with a nightguard and did it with an execise my dentist gave me.

My GP was useless. He just said 'yeah, people with anxiety get things like this' :doh: He offered nothing to work on it. My dentist was far superior.