Pain experienced at teeth during orthodontic treatment varies largely over time, with the reasons for its inter-individual variability being largely unknown: age, sex, clinical activations, psychosocial factors, and genetical polymorphisms of candidate genes are putative factors that may account to explain this variability. We aimed to investigate the effect of clinical, demographic, psychological, and genetical factors on pain levels experienced during fixed orthodontic treatment.
A convenience sample of 183 patients undergoing full-fixed orthodontic treatment was recruited. Participant’s pain levels were assessed seven times over a three-day period via a smartphone App. Clinical, demographic, and psychological data were collected via questionnaires. This included the Pain Catastrophising Scale (Child Version); the Corah Dental Anxiety Scale; and the State and Trait Anxiety Inventory. Participants provided a DNA sample either in the form of blood or saliva, which were used for genotyping COMT gene rs6269, rs4680, rs4646310, NR3C1 gene rs2963155 and the HTR2A gene rs9316233.
Bond ups had the greatest influence on perceived levels of pain experienced on teeth during orthodontic treatment, accounting for over 20% of total variance in pain response. High pain responders had higher scores on pain catastrophising (magnification subscale). Self-reported pain during fixed orthodontic treatment was not influenced by sex, age, time into treatment, anxiety, nor by polymorphisms of COMT, HTR2A or NR3C1 genes.
Pain on teeth resulting from orthodontic fixed appliances is stronger during bonds-up and in patients with high catastrophizing scores. Demographics, type of clinical activations, and the genetic polymorphisms investigated in this research had little or no impact on perceived pain levels.

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