Dislodged Tmj Disc - Corrected Without Surgery In Minutes Posted: 11-26-05 01:56am
A couple of weeks ago, a maxillofacial
surgeon recommended that I would require
open surgery on my face across my jaw to
reattach my tmj disc which apparently had
a tear and was stuck in the wrong
position, only allowing me to open my
mouth a centimetre. The pain in my jaw
had been unbearable and I was seriously
contemplating having surgery since I was
so desperate to ease the immense pain and
eat solids again.
But thanks be to god, when I was given the
paper to sign my consent I had second
thoughts and wanted a second opinion. I
managed to arrange an emergency
appointment with an experienced professor
who looked at all my scans then said he
reckoned surgery would not be needed….He
was going to manually dislocate my jaw and
going to hopefully ‘pop’ the disc back
into position.
The amazing thing is that the chances of
success of this method according to him
are actually very high. What he did was
place me in the chair, got his assistant
to hold my head down, firmly grabbed the
top of my jaw, told to relax my jaw
muscles and then with the other hand
gradually started pulling my jaw to the
other side of my face in the direction of
the pain and then manipulating my jaw back
and forth on that side.
He first pulled my jaw to the side of my
face with the dislocated disc, it wasn’t
painful but you do feel some strain in the
other joint, but it isn’t damaging to
other side, only quite uncomfortable (but
worth it!). There was no ‘click’ or
‘pop’ yet so then he pulled my jaw as
wide as possible a few times more and more
gradually. Then from that wide range he
pulled my jaw far to the side where the
pain was and by the grace of god I felt a
loud ‘click’ as I felt my disc pop
into place.
He then kept opening my jaw a few times,
every time ensuring that there was a click
as he opened it wide. He told me to take
notice of the exact area of the
‘click’ and I measured the space with
my fingers. I was told never to open my
jaw past that point and to only chew at
half that range and to practise opening
and closing my mouth just before the
‘click’, since the ‘clicking’ can
cause wear and isn’t healthy.
I was informed that even if couldn’t
perform the dislocation of the jaw while I
was awake due to my pain tolerance level
or if I wasn’t able to relax my jaw then
he could put me to sleep for a few minutes
to perhaps attempt a more vigorous
attempt, which then often works.
Even if my jaw was unstable and clicked
really early, he said that what he would
have done was attach elastics to my top
and bottom jaws for a few months to
prevent me from going past the ‘clicking
point’ and then to gradually widen the
range I could open my mouth.
He said that surgery would only be
required in exceptional circumstances and
that I didn’t need it. I felt the
pressure and pain going away immediately
away after he manipulated my jaw, and now
three days later i’m pain free and in a
month after a follow-up appointment and
after the swelling has fully subsided then
I will be able to begin eating solids
again.
Note:
-the jaw is not designed to open very
widely
- it is not designed to chew at a wide
range
- always chew at half the range of the
‘click’ if any
- when you yawn, do not open your jaw
widely and keep the mouth closed with your
fist or hand
- always cut your food into little pieces
and if possible ‘mash’ it up before
eating it.
- taking a bit out of an apple or large
fruit is bad for the jaw or eating any
food that requires a ripping or tearing
movement like eating beef jerky/biltong.
Never give-up, try everything you can and
be weary of doctors who are eager to
operate and make elaborate explanations
that if you want the operation it must be
done immediately or too much scar tissue
or fibrosis will develop.
Please take your time, and find the best
expert you can and get a second or third
opinion along with (if you have the means)
an x-ray to check that there aren’t
fractures in your jaw or that your wisdom
teeth aren’t pushing against the joint,
a ct scan to check the cartilage and the
bones, and then a mr scan to check where
the disc might be dislocated or if it is
damaged.
Though, often a damaged disc can still
function painlessly if ‘popped’ back
into the correct position and you look
after your jaw and take some
precautions.
***
i hope I have helped some of you, and
please spread this information to spare
others of any unnecessary surgery or
unnecessary suffering. And if you have
recovered, continue to help others
suffering the condition you had and never
forget how bad it was and remember to look
after your jaw in the future and avoid
hard foods if possible.