Association between cynical hostility and temporomandibular pain mediated through somatization and depression:an 11-year follow-up study on Finnish adults

Abstract

Abstract Background: Hostility is believed to have an adverse effect on physical health through mediating psychosocial factors. Objectives: This study aimed to investigate the association of hostility with temporomandibular (TMD) pain. Another aim was to investigate if the association is mediated through increases in depressiveness and somatization in an 11-year follow-up on Finnish adults, based on the Health 2000 and 2011 Surveys (BRIF8901). Material and methods: The sample comprised subjects who underwent clinical TMD pain examination (pain on palpation of the masticatory muscles and temporomandibular joints) in 2000 and 2011 and responded to questions on TMD pain symptoms in 2011. Hostility was measured using the Cynical Distrust Scale, somatization was measured using the Symptom Checklist-90, and depressiveness using Beck’s Depression Inventory-21. Four subgroups were formed based on the presence of TMD pain: no pain, pain in 2000 only, pain in 2011 only, and pain in 2000 and 2011. Analyses included chi-square test cross-sectionally, and multinomial logistic regression longitudinally with the level of hostility in 2000 as the predictor. Mediation analysis was performed using Hayes’ Process v3.5. Results: Those with higher hostility showed a higher prevalence of TMD pain. Longitudinally, the association of hostility with TMD pain in 2000 only, and with TMD pain in both years, was mediated either by somatization only or by depressiveness that was mediated by somatization. In those with TMD pain in 2011 only, the association was mediated by depressiveness that was mediated by somatization. Conclusion: Hostility increased the risk of TMD pain through increases in depressiveness and somatization

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image