Evidence behind this recommendation.
Selected studies from our library that inform the recommendations on this page. Evidence grade shown when available.
Effect of acupuncture for temporomandibular disorders: randomized clinical trial
“Acupuncture significantly reduced pain and functional limitation in patients with articular and muscular TMD, with improvement superior to the control group in mandibular function.”
Effect of dry needling on myofascial pain syndrome: double-blind placebo-controlled RCT
“Dry needling of myofascial trigger points significantly reduced pain and increased pressure pain threshold vs. sham needling, with sustained response at follow-up.”
What Muscular TMD Is
Temporomandibular dysfunction of muscular origin (muscular TMD) is the most prevalent form of TMD, representing approximately 60–70% of cases. It is characterized by pain and functional limitation originating in the masticatory muscles — mainly masseter, temporalis, medial and lateral pterygoids — and in the associated cervical muscles (sternocleidomastoid, upper trapezius, suboccipitals).
Masticatory myalgia can manifest as local pain (simple myalgia), referred pain (myofascial myalgia) with cephalalgic patterns in the temples and ears, trismus (limitation of opening due to muscle spasm), and myositis (muscle inflammation post-trauma or infection). The presence of myofascial trigger points (MTrP) — palpable hypersensitive nodules in taut muscle bands — is the pathophysiological hallmark of myofascial myalgia.
Pathophysiology of Masticatory Myalgia
Myofascial trigger point (MTrP)
Hypersensitive nodule in a taut muscle band; dysfunctional motor end-plate with sustained depolarization due to excess acetylcholine
Ischemia-spasm cycle
Sarcomere shortening → increased local energy demand → ATP and O2 depletion → accumulation of lactic acid and substance P → peripheral sensitization
Central trigeminal sensitization
Chronic pain sensitizes the trigeminal spinal nucleus; expansion of the receptive field; pain referred to temple, ear, tooth, and eye
Bruxism and parafunction
Nocturnal parafunctional activity (bruxism) and daytime (clenching, nail biting) maintain the cycle of masticatory muscle hyperactivity
Psychosocial component
Stress and anxiety amplify baseline masticatory EMG activity; catastrophizing perpetuates central sensitization — DC/TMD Axis II
Diagnosis — DC/TMD Axis I and Axis II
- Muscle pain on palpation of the masseter and/or temporalis + pain reproduced by opening and mandibular movements
- Active trigger point: pain on palpation with reproduction of familiar pain referred to the trigeminal territory
- Maximum assisted opening ≥40 mm without pain (excludes true articular limitation)
- Surface electromyography (EMG): hyperactivity of masseter and temporalis at rest and during occlusion
- Axis II: PHQ-9, GAD-7, JFLS, PCS (Pain Catastrophizing Scale) — psychosocial factors that determine prognosis
Conventional Treatments
The treatment of muscular TMD is conservative and multimodal. The combination of physical therapy, behavioral management, and pharmacotherapy when necessary offers the best results. Surgical interventions have no indication in TMD of purely muscular origin.
THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES IN MUSCULAR TMD
| APPROACH | EFFICACY | LIMITATIONS | COMPATIBLE WITH ACUPUNCTURE? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stabilization occlusal splint | Moderate for associated nighttime bruxism; reduces muscle load | Does not treat MTrP; variable results for daytime pain | Yes — acupuncture treats musculature, splint protects joint |
| Physical therapy / manual therapy | High for myalgia and MTrP; myofascial inhibition techniques | Limited access to specialists; treatment duration | Excellent combination — documented synergistic effects |
| TENS and thermotherapy | Moderate for temporary pain relief; good tolerability | Short-duration effect; does not resolve active MTrP | Yes — complementary to acupuncture |
| Cyclobenzaprine / muscle relaxants | Moderate short-term for trismus and acute spasm | Drowsiness; potential dependence; use limited to ≤2 weeks | Yes — acupuncture may support the reduction of pharmacotherapy under medical guidance |
| Acupuncture / dry needling | Favorable evidence for MTrP, myalgia, and trismus as a complement | Requires a medical acupuncturist; 6–12 sessions | Complement to the multimodal protocol for muscular TMD |
How Medical Acupuncture Works in Muscular TMD
Medical acupuncture in muscular TMD acts through well-documented molecular and neurological mechanisms: dissolution of the myofascial trigger point, restoration of local muscle metabolism, central analgesia via opioid and serotonergic pathways, and reduction of the baseline EMG hyperactivity of the masticatory muscles.
DOCUMENTED EFFECTS OF ACUPUNCTURE IN MUSCULAR TMD
Clinical Studies
The scientific literature on acupuncture and dry needling in muscular TMD is robust, with multiple randomized trials demonstrating superiority over TENS, isolated pharmacological treatment, and occlusal splint for specific muscular outcomes.
CLINICAL OUTCOMES — JOURNAL OF OROFACIAL PAIN 2019 (N=70)
What the Studies Show
- Needling of masticatory MTrP superior to TENS and hot compresses for immediate trismus relief (J Orofac Pain 2019)
- Acupuncture + dry needling superior to cyclobenzaprine for EMG and mandibular function (Oral Surg Oral Med 2021)
- Sustained effect: 68% of patients maintained elevated PPT and opening ≥38 mm at 3-month follow-up
- Acupuncture combined with TMJ physical therapy: mouth opening +9.4 mm vs. +5.1 mm with isolated acupuncture
- Reduction in tension-type headache frequency in 52% of patients treated for muscular TMD
Modern Approach: Acupuncture in the Management of Muscular TMD
Muscular TMD is most successfully treated by multimodal protocols that simultaneously address the local muscular component (MTrP), the central component (trigeminal sensitization), and the psychosocial component (Axis II).
Integrative Protocol for Muscular TMD
Acute phase — trismus and spasm (weeks 1–3)
Direct dry needling of active MTrP in the masseter and temporalis 2x/week; soft diet; local moist heat; muscle relaxant for limited time if indicated
Rehabilitation phase (weeks 4–8)
Systemic acupuncture 1x/week (LI-4, GV-20, SP-6, ST-36 for central modulation) + TMJ physical therapy; active muscle stretching exercises; EMG biofeedback
Management of nighttime bruxism
Nighttime occlusal splint by the dentist; acupuncture to reduce nighttime masticatory hyperactivity; stress management if identified as a trigger
Psychosocial component (Axis II)
Acupuncture for the autonomic nervous system (HT-7, PC-6, GV-20) when anxiety and stress are identified perpetuators; psychological referral when catastrophizing is high
When to See a Medical Acupuncturist
Muscular TMD presents an excellent profile of response to acupuncture and dry needling, especially in early phases and without established central sensitization.
Profiles with Best Response to Medical Acupuncture
- Acute or subacute masticatory myalgia with palpable active MTrP in the masseter and temporalis
- Trismus (opening <35 mm) due to muscle spasm post-trauma, stress, or prolonged dental procedure
- Tension-type headache originating in identified masticatory and suboccipital MTrP
- Muscular TMD with nighttime bruxism in treatment with splint (acupuncture as a complement)
- Myalgia refractory to physical therapy alone — acupuncture as a potentiator of the physical therapy response
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Dry needling of active trigger points produces the "local twitch response" — a brief muscle fasciculation that may be uncomfortable for 1–2 seconds. After the LTR, most patients report immediate relief. Post-needling soreness (muscle soreness for 24–48h, similar to post-exercise) is common and indicates that the MTrP was reached correctly.
In general, 2–4 MTrP per session at the start of treatment to avoid excessive post-needling pain reaction. With progression, 6–8 MTrP per session can be treated. The masseter, anterior temporalis, and suboccipitals are the most frequently addressed in typical muscular TMD.
Yes — and it is especially indicated during these periods, since stress amplifies masticatory EMG activity and accelerates the formation of new MTrP. Systemic acupuncture (HT-7, PC-6, SP-6) during phases of intense stress reduces the autonomic hyperactivity that fuels the cycle of masticatory muscle tension.
Primary muscular TMD has an excellent prognosis with adequate treatment — most patients achieve sustained remission. However, perpetuating factors such as nighttime bruxism, inadequate cervical posture, and chronic stress can lead to recurrences. Maintenance treatment (monthly acupuncture + use of the splint + sleep hygiene) prevents most relapses.
In general, yes, provided that no invasive dental procedure was performed in the same session (extraction, scaling, extensive restoration). After procedures with local anesthesia, wait 24–48h to resume acupuncture at facial points, since residual anesthesia alters the tissue response and can mask signs of inadequate needle positioning.