Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle

This work seeks to alert medical and odontological staff to understanding and using interdisciplinary handling for detecting different pathologies’ common otic symptoms. It offers better tools for this shared symptomatology during therapy’s conservative phase. Tensor tympani muscle physiology and function in the middle ear have been veiled, even when their dysfunction and anatomical relationships may explain a group of confused otic symptoms during conventional clinical evaluation. Middle ear muscles share a common embryological and functional origin with chewing and facial muscles. This article emphasizes that these muscles share a functional neurological and anatomical dimension with the stomatognathic system; these muscles’ increased tonicity ceases to be a phenomenon having no logical connections. It offers functionality and importance in understanding referred otic symptoms in common with other extra-otical symptom pathologies. Tinnitus, vertigo, otic fullness sensation, hyperacusia, hypoacusia and otalgia are not only primary hearing organ symptoms. They should be redefined and related to the neighboring pathologies which can produce them. There is a need to understand temporomandibular disorders and craniofacial referred symptomatology from neurophysiologic and muscle-skeletal angles contained in the stomatognathic system. Common symptomatology is frequently observed in otic symptoms and temporomandibular disorders during daily practice; this should be understood by each discipline from a broad, anatomical and clinical perspective.

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Main Authors: Ramírez,Luis Miguel, Ballesteros,Luis Ernestos, Pablo Sandoval,German
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedad Española de Medicina Oral 2007
Online Access:http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1698-69462007000200003
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spelling oai:scielo:S1698-694620070002000032008-04-17Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscleRamírez,Luis MiguelBallesteros,Luis ErnestosPablo Sandoval,German Oscicular chain temporomandibular disorders otic symptoms malleus tensor veli palatini tensor tympani This work seeks to alert medical and odontological staff to understanding and using interdisciplinary handling for detecting different pathologies’ common otic symptoms. It offers better tools for this shared symptomatology during therapy’s conservative phase. Tensor tympani muscle physiology and function in the middle ear have been veiled, even when their dysfunction and anatomical relationships may explain a group of confused otic symptoms during conventional clinical evaluation. Middle ear muscles share a common embryological and functional origin with chewing and facial muscles. This article emphasizes that these muscles share a functional neurological and anatomical dimension with the stomatognathic system; these muscles’ increased tonicity ceases to be a phenomenon having no logical connections. It offers functionality and importance in understanding referred otic symptoms in common with other extra-otical symptom pathologies. Tinnitus, vertigo, otic fullness sensation, hyperacusia, hypoacusia and otalgia are not only primary hearing organ symptoms. They should be redefined and related to the neighboring pathologies which can produce them. There is a need to understand temporomandibular disorders and craniofacial referred symptomatology from neurophysiologic and muscle-skeletal angles contained in the stomatognathic system. Common symptomatology is frequently observed in otic symptoms and temporomandibular disorders during daily practice; this should be understood by each discipline from a broad, anatomical and clinical perspective.Sociedad Española de Medicina OralMedicina Oral, Patología Oral y Cirugía Bucal (Internet) v.12 n.2 20072007-03-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1698-69462007000200003en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country España
countrycode ES
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-es
tag revista
region Europa del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Ramírez,Luis Miguel
Ballesteros,Luis Ernestos
Pablo Sandoval,German
spellingShingle Ramírez,Luis Miguel
Ballesteros,Luis Ernestos
Pablo Sandoval,German
Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle
author_facet Ramírez,Luis Miguel
Ballesteros,Luis Ernestos
Pablo Sandoval,German
author_sort Ramírez,Luis Miguel
title Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle
title_short Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle
title_full Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle
title_fullStr Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle
title_full_unstemmed Tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle
title_sort tensor tympani muscle: strange chewing muscle
description This work seeks to alert medical and odontological staff to understanding and using interdisciplinary handling for detecting different pathologies’ common otic symptoms. It offers better tools for this shared symptomatology during therapy’s conservative phase. Tensor tympani muscle physiology and function in the middle ear have been veiled, even when their dysfunction and anatomical relationships may explain a group of confused otic symptoms during conventional clinical evaluation. Middle ear muscles share a common embryological and functional origin with chewing and facial muscles. This article emphasizes that these muscles share a functional neurological and anatomical dimension with the stomatognathic system; these muscles’ increased tonicity ceases to be a phenomenon having no logical connections. It offers functionality and importance in understanding referred otic symptoms in common with other extra-otical symptom pathologies. Tinnitus, vertigo, otic fullness sensation, hyperacusia, hypoacusia and otalgia are not only primary hearing organ symptoms. They should be redefined and related to the neighboring pathologies which can produce them. There is a need to understand temporomandibular disorders and craniofacial referred symptomatology from neurophysiologic and muscle-skeletal angles contained in the stomatognathic system. Common symptomatology is frequently observed in otic symptoms and temporomandibular disorders during daily practice; this should be understood by each discipline from a broad, anatomical and clinical perspective.
publisher Sociedad Española de Medicina Oral
publishDate 2007
url http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1698-69462007000200003
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AT ballesterosluisernestos tensortympanimusclestrangechewingmuscle
AT pablosandovalgerman tensortympanimusclestrangechewingmuscle
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