Association between Oral Parafunctional Habits with Personality Type in Individuals

Authors

  • Hira Butt, Nauman Rauf Khan, Saeed ur Rehman, Zainab Waheed, Darab Fatima Babary, Taimur Hassan Shah

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53350/pjmhs22164561

Keywords:

Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, Openness to experience, Emotional stability, Oral parafunctional habits

Abstract

Objective: To find the association between oral parafunctional habits and personality traits in individuals.

Methodology: A Cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted at the College of Dentistry, Sharif Medical and Dental College, Lahore, over 5 months, from July to November 2021. All individuals, irrespective of their age and gender and those who reported having oral parafunctional habits, were included. Individuals with a history of smoking and those with any systemic illness were excluded. Data was collected using a medical questionnaire and a ten-item personality inventory scale (TIPI).

Results: The association between personality traits and oral parafunctional habits was not statistically significant. The association between extraversion personality trait and nail-biting (p=0.267), teeth grinding (p=00754), teeth clenching (p=0.450) and biting hard objects (p=0.582) was not significant. The association between agreeableness and nail-biting (p=0.112), teeth grinding (p=0.612), teeth clenching (p=0.430), biting hard objects (p=0.639) and chewing gum (p=1.000) was not significant. The association between conscientiousness and nail-biting (p=0.588), teeth grinding (p=0.588), teeth clenching (p=0.325), biting hard objects(p=1.000) and chewing gum (p=1.000) was non-significant. Similarly, the association between personality traits of emotional stability and openness to experience with nail-biting (p=0.138, p=0.594 respectively), Teeth grinding (p=0.586,0.594 respectively), teeth clenching (p=0.813, p=1.000 respectively), biting hard objects (p=0.075, p= 0.347 respectively) and chewing gum (p=0.585, p=0.556 respectively) was non-significant.

Conclusion: The majority of individuals from all personality types had a habit of teeth clenching followed by biting on hard objects. The least prevalent parafunctional habit reported by them was the parafunctional habit of chewing gum.

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How to Cite

Hira Butt, Nauman Rauf Khan, Saeed ur Rehman, Zainab Waheed, Darab Fatima Babary, Taimur Hassan Shah. (2022). Association between Oral Parafunctional Habits with Personality Type in Individuals. Pakistan Journal of Medical & Health Sciences, 16(04), 561. https://doi.org/10.53350/pjmhs22164561