Oral Surgery Procedure

TMJ Disorders

Pain, discomfort or jaw clicking could indicate TMJ dysfunction. Book a consultation with Waterloo Oral Surgery to begin the diagnosis and treatment of your jaw pain.

procedures

Our office is not currently accepting any TMJ referrals/cases at this time.

02

procedures

Trouble With Your Jaw?

TMJ disorders develop for many reasons. You might clench or grind your teeth, tightening your jaw muscles and stressing your TM joint. You may have a damaged jaw joint due to injury or disease. Injuries and arthritis can damage the joint directly or stretch or tear the muscle ligaments. As a result, the disk, which is made of cartilage and functions as the “cushion” of the jaw joint, can slip out of position. Whatever the cause, the results may include a misaligned bite, pain, clicking, or grating noise when you open your mouth or trouble opening your mouth wide.

03

procedures

Do You Have A TMJ Disorder?

  • Are you aware of grinding or clenching your teeth?
  • Do you wake up with sore, stiff muscles around your jaws?
  • Do you have frequent headaches or neck aches?
  • Does the pain get worse when you clench your teeth?
  • Does stress make your clenching and pain worse?
  • Does your jaw click, pop, grate, catch, or lock when you open your mouth?
  • Is it difficult or painful to open your mouth, eat, or yawn?
  • Have you ever injured your neck, head, or jaws?
  • Have you had problems (such as arthritis) with other joints?
  • Do you have teeth that no longer touch when you bite?
  • Do your teeth meet differently from time to time?
  • Is it hard to use your front teeth to bite or tear food?
  • Are your teeth sensitive, loose, broken, or worn?

The more times you answered “yes”, the more likely it is that you have a TMJ disorder. Understanding TMJ disorders will also help you understand how they are treated.

05

procedures

What About Bite Correction Or Surgery?

If your TMJ disorder has caused problems with how your teeth fit together, you may need treatment such as bite adjustment (equilibration), orthodontics with or without jaw reconstruction, or restorative dental work. Surgical options such as arthroscopy and open joint repair restructuring are sometimes needed but are reserved for severe cases.our surgical teamdoes not consider TMJ surgery unless the jaw can’t open, is dislocated and nonreducible, has severe degeneration, or the patient has undergone appliance treatment unsuccessfully.

Procedure FAQ

Questions About TMJ Disorders

When should I ask about TMJ disorders in Waterloo?

Patients should ask about tmj disorders when a dentist has recommended specialist oral surgery care, symptoms are affecting comfort or function, or imaging suggests that jaw joint pain, clicking, locking, headaches, or chewing discomfort may need assessment. The Waterloo office can review referrals, records, and next steps during consultation.

What happens during a consultation for TMJ disorders?

A consultation usually includes a review of medical history, dental concerns, referral information, and any needed imaging. The surgical team explains whether tmj disorders is appropriate, what alternatives may exist, and how treatment is planned.

How should I prepare for TMJ disorders?

Patients should describe symptoms, triggers, bite changes, prior dental treatment, and any imaging or appliance history. Patients should bring medication details, referral information, insurance questions, and any X-rays or imaging requested by the office.

Ready to connect?

Call Our Office.

Call +1 (519)-743-7811

Directions

Online Map & Driving Directions

Visit our Waterloo oral and maxillofacial surgery office at 96 Union Street East. Open our Google Business Profile for directions, office details, and patient reviews before your appointment.

Find directions, parking context, business profile details, and Google reviews for our Waterloo office.