Question: Are there any tested, proven treatments for grinding and clenching my teeth while asleep?
We talk about “gritted teeth” when someone’s determined, furious, or perhaps resigned to a course of action they’re not too happy about it.
Those with the teeth grinding or clenching habit — known as bruxism — do have a bit to be unhappy about.
It can be a pain (literally), make noises that keep your partner awake, lead to strange lumps growing in your gums, and be a costly dental problem.
Dentists call those who do this with their teeth “bruxers” and there are actually two classes: those who grind and clench while they’re awake (awake bruxers), and those who do it when they’re asleep (sleep bruxers).
We’re all likely to have episodes of teeth grinding at some point in our lives, says Professor Christopher Peck, Dean of Dentistry at the University of Sydney. But ongoing bruxism affects roughly one in 10 people.
And it seems those who practise this assault on their pearly whites when they’re asleep are more common than those who grind and clench when they go about their daily life.
A pain in the neck
Bruxers can experience jaw pain and tension because of the force the grinding applies to the jaw, and the discomfort may also spread to nearby parts of the body, producing neck pain or headaches.
Most people who grind their teeth only occasionally will never realise they do it. It’s usually only those who habitually grind and develop symptoms who tend to twig something is wrong.