Awake Bruxism Treated With Quetiapine in a Patient With Alzheimer’s Dementia
Regina Rachel Khakha, Seema Rani

TL;DR
A 63-year-old man with Alzheimer's dementia experienced a complete reduction in awake bruxism after being treated with quetiapine.
Contribution
This case report suggests quetiapine may be effective in treating awake bruxism in Alzheimer's dementia patients.
Findings
Quetiapine at 100 mg daily eliminated awake bruxism in a patient with Alzheimer’s dementia.
The patient showed improved cognitive scores with donepezil treatment.
The response to quetiapine suggests a possible dopaminergic pathway involvement in bruxism in dementia.
Abstract
Aims: Bruxism is a stereotyped movement disorder of tooth grinding or clenching. Unlike sleep bruxism, awake bruxism is not a sleep disorder, but is secondary to disorders of the central nervous system, such as Parkinson’s disease, stroke and advanced dementia. We report a case of debilitating awake bruxism that developed during the course of Alzheimer’s dementia, unrelated to neuroleptic use. Methods: A 63-year-old man presented to our outpatient clinic of a tertiary care hospital in India, with a 4-year history of progressive short-term memory loss, increasing apathy and a constant audible teeth grinding in the day, which distracted him from social interaction. He was not taking any medications. Examination demonstrated phasic teeth grinding and extensive teeth wearing, but no extrapyramidal features or transient hypertonicity induced by distraction. Mini-Mental State Examination…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTemporomandibular Joint Disorders · Pharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies · Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics
