Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction in Traditional Chinese Medicine

Understanding different temporomandibular joint dysfunction patterns according to TCM theory

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Condition Categories

1
TCM Pattern
1
Formula
Overview
What causes it 1 TCM pattern documented
How to recognize Symptoms specific to each temporomandibular joint dysfunction pattern
Classical remedies 1 herbal formula documented

In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), a 'pattern' is a diagnostic framework that explains a person's health condition in terms of an imbalance in the body's natural systems. It is a cornerstone of TCM diagnosis and treatment, representing a composite of all signs and symptoms, including emotional disposition, pulse, and tongue characteristics.

Understanding a patient's specific pattern is vital because it guides the practitioner to the most effective treatment strategy. This personalized approach, centered on the individual's pattern of disharmony, ensures that the treatment targets not just the symptoms but the root cause of the condition as well.

TCM Patterns for Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction

Each pattern represents a distinct underlying imbalance that can cause temporomandibular joint dysfunction

Diagnostic signs

Pulse

Fine (Xi), Slow (Chi), Weak (Ruo)

Tongue

The tongue is typically pale, reflecting the underlying Blood and Essence deficiency. It tends to be on the thinner side, indicating insufficient nourishment of the body's substance. The coating is thin and white, consistent with Cold-type Bi and overall deficiency. In some cases there may be fine cracks on the tongue body, reflecting depleted Yin and fluids from chronic illness. If Blood Stasis has developed alongside the deficiency, subtle purple tinges may appear at the edges, but an overtly purple tongue would suggest a more advanced stasis pattern.

Herbal Formulas for Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction

Traditional Chinese Medicine formulas used to address temporomandibular joint dysfunction

Du Huo Ji Sheng Tang

Traditional formula for temporomandibular joint dysfunction