NothingNobody Posted May 18, 2018 Posted May 18, 2018 "In 2010, Williams et al. published a breakthrough real-time study demonstrating marked lateral displacement of the temporal bones in MS patients during bruxism (Ref). Using a pulse phase locked loop (PPLL) device, MS patients were found to have a bilateral temporal bone displacement six times greater than healthy controls during a sustained clenching force of 100 pounds of pressure. It was hypothesized that reduced bone density in MS patients can increase the displacement along the cranial sutures, possibly allowing skull bone deflection to create damaging pressure waves." You can read more about it here: www.houseofenoch.com/diseases/multiple-sclerosis/
iNow Posted May 18, 2018 Posted May 18, 2018 I suspect you’ve got a correlation is not causation issue here.
John Cuthber Posted May 18, 2018 Posted May 18, 2018 Or causation, but in the other direction. Maybe MS causes jaw problems.
YaDinghus Posted May 29, 2018 Posted May 29, 2018 (edited) So I followed the link provided by OP and downloaded A. Schelling's book. I'll read it when I'm less distracted. I did a small check on the person who wrote the book and he seems legit, has been a medical professional in Austria since 1973 and is a specialist on MS Edit: The Williams paper on Bruxism and MS is a preliminary research paper, and yes, it establishes a correlation. I'm guessing a study to find evidence for causation is planned or maybe even underway Edited May 29, 2018 by YaDinghus Addition
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