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Masseter Muscle

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Origin: Inferior aspect of zygomatic arch

Insertion: Lateral aspect of ramus of mandible

Action: Closure of the jaw and a bit of protrusion. When acting unilaterally, the masseter can assist the jaw to deviate ipsilaterally.

 

 

 


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Anatomical Relations

Some of the muscles of facial expression lie on top of the masseter in the cheek tissue, particularly the “smiling” muscles that pull the lip upwards.

The parotid gland lies on top of the masseter muscle, but is seldom palpable unless it is infected or if it’s duct is blocked. 

 


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Assessment   

There are many types of information that may lead you to consider the masseter as a source of problems for your client, ranging from the type of pain the client feels to a history of trauma. Physical assessment results that are used to confirm or refute masseter involvement are similarly varied and we will explore each of these issues in some detail below.

For a video summary of this section click on the image at right.

History and Pain Patterns

Clients with masseter problems often have a history of prolonged jaw opening (long and/or painful visits to the dentist), or excessive use of the jaw (such as habitual gum chewing). Dental visits have historically been a great source of masseter problems for clients in my practice. Dentists who recently graduated from dental school tend to have training in temporomandibular joint problems and practice in such a way as to avoid long periods of maximal jaw opening. Occasionally, a painful or maximal opening intervention can’t be avoided and clients will often suffer afterwards.

Trigger points in the masseter can cause molar pain, maxillary sinus symptoms and aching in the jaw. It is common for masseter trigger points to cause these symptoms, but it is also common for master trigger points to be set up by these symptoms. Especially when sinusitis or dental cavity pain has been slow to resolve, it is more likely that trigger points are created that sustain the symptoms after the medical or dental condition has been successfully treated. In these situations, palpation of the trigger points will cause the symptoms for the client and resolution of the trigger points tends to resolve the symptoms.

 

 

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It is common for clients with jaw problems to engage in parafunctional activities that tend to worsen the pattern of pain and dysfunction. Parafunction is when the jaw is used in activities that simulate normal movements, but are excessive. The jaw is designed to eat and to express ourselves verbally. Gum chewing mimics eating, but is sustained way beyond the length of a meal. Hours of chewing-type motions exercise the masseter and temporalis muscles, but also act to sustain and worsen tension in these muscles. Other types of parafunctional habits include grinding one’s teeth, chewing pencils, fingers or strands of hair. Very few clients with problems in this area will improve without challenging their parafunctional habits.

It is also common for a problem in this region to be a metaphor for psychological tension. I’ve treated clients with chronic masseter tension who felt they were being forced to take in more than they could swallow in their lives, as well as clients who felt they had to bite off their words before they spoke them.

For a video overview of a masseter assesment click the image of the remote at right!

Visual Assessment / Body Reading

Clients with masseter problems often have extra-well developed masseter muscles. When you see a person with rippling masseter muscles you know that the resting tension of the muscle is high and probably causing them problems.

If the masseter is short then the person will not be able to open their mouth fully. People who seem to be moving their lips a lot when they are talking often do this because their jaw doesn’t open fully. Next time you see a person with busy lips without a jaw that opens fully, think of the masseter muscle!

 

Jaw Opening Mechanics

The masseter is the most powerful jaw closure muscle. It is also the muscle most capable of limiting jaw opening. The low-tech way to measure maximal opening is to ask the client to insert a stack of the knuckles of their non-dominant hand between their incisors. A jaw with normal opening will accommodate three knuckles. Masseter tension and trigger points can limit opening to as little as 1 ½ knuckles! More commonly masseter tension will limit opening to 2 or 2 ½ knuckles.

If your client’s opening is normal and full, or even excessive (greater than 3 knuckles) then they can still have masseter problems. Joint hypermobility puts more load and strain into the masseters as they try to control the jaw motion. These people will also be full of knots and tension when they are palpated!

It is also important to assess incisal path when looking for jaw muscle problems. When the masseter muscles are tight bilaterally (on each side of the head) then the jaw will tend to open symmetrically. However, if only one masseter muscle is tight, then it will drag the jaw over toward the tight side as the client opens their mouth. This because the masseter is anchored on the zygomatic arch more laterally than its attachment on the mandible. Thus when the mandible moves open and forward it will be dragged toward the side of the tight masseter.

 

Palpation

The masseter is easily palpated through the cheek tissue. If you have a hard time landmarking the muscle ask the client to briefly clench their teeth and it will jump into your fingers between the zygomatic arch and the angle of the mandible. You will be able to feel tension in the fibers most easily by palpating in a cross-fibre anterior-posterior direction on the muscle.

Compare the two masseter muscles to each other and gradually build up your kinesthetic library of people’s masseters that you have palpated and treated to get a sense of what “normal” is.

Ideally, the masseter should have a silky, soft and smooth texture at rest. Taut bands, hyperirritable spots and excessive densities within the muscle indicate tension and trigger points. Especially when palpation re-creates some, or all, of your client’s symptoms.

 


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 Treatment Planning / Consent

The more you look for masseter problems, the more you will find them. You should examine the masseter with any client with recurrent head, neck or facial pain that keeps coming back or whose problems don’t completely resolve with whatever techniques you are doing.

Treatment planning for the masseter usually begins by recognizing one or more issues from the assessment process (above). It is important to educate the client about the masseter and why you feel it is likely a problem.

It is also important to recognize that the masseter is best treated intra-orally. Once you have treated one or two masseter muscles intra-orally, you will recognize just how little of the muscle relaxes when you treat it extra-orally, working through the cheek tissue.

Working intra-orally raises a few concerns and responsibilities we don’t normally have to consider as massage therapists. The first concern is the possibility of an allergic reaction to the glove material. Historically, this work has been done with latex gloves. However, there are now quite a few people who are allergic to latex, often due to exposure to a lot of latex working in hospitals. I use nitrile or vinyl gloves and always check with my clients that they have no allergies to the gloves I use.

The other concern is that the client is in much more vulnerable when we are working in their mouth. Oral tissue is much more sensitive. And they may not be able to speak fully when you have a finger in their mouth! You must establish some type of signal protocol so that they can use to alert you when they wish you to stop or give them a break!

The last concern is that clients may have been orally abused. One of my clients put this in focus for me when she told me that she had been orally raped. This disturbing information has sensitized me to just how violently she had been abused. As a result, I treat all clients intra-orally with the psychological equivalent of universal precautions. I treat every person with the respect and empowerment that I would treat someone with who had been raped intra-orally.

The way I do this is that I stress that clients need to feel comfortable and in control throughout the entire treatment. I establish a hand-signal or alternative protocol with them and demonstrate to them that they are in charge, by stopping the treatment shortly after I begin working intra-orally and check that they are comfortable with the work.

A welcome piece of news for most clients is that the treatment of the masseter is a treatment in the cheek and not in the mouth proper so it is highly unlikely to create any gagging feelings. For many intra-oral treatments, I will only treat the masseter the first treatment, so that the client gets a good sense of the tension in the mouth and jaw and how good if feels to get rid of some of it!

 


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 Treatment    

I like to treat the masseter with a bimanual (two-handed) approach. One finger is inside my client’s mouth and the other hand supports the work with extra-oral contact.

This is different than a pincer grasp between thumb and forefinger of one hand. The single-handed pincer grip necessitates a bit more tension in the therapist’s hand and this makes the hand less sensitive to the client. Consequently treatment with a single hand pincer grip tends to be a bit more “heavy-handed”.

For a video of treatment click the image at right!

It is important to remember that much tension in the masseter arises from situations where the client feels out of control, not attended to, and similar feelings. If you must err in your application of force, make sure it is on the side of being too soft, rather than too firm.

 


Homecare

Normally after treating a problematic muscle, we stretch it. Don’t stretch the masseter! Because masseter tension is often a result of underlying hypermobility of the TMJ, a stretch of the muscle may stress the TMJ and/or increase the joint’s hypermobility!                                                        

The more common standard care for the masseter is to dismantle parafunctional habits. People have to learn that their gum chewing etc. actually locks tension into their body, rather than releasing it. While people can’t seem to stop clenching their jaw on their own, they often are much more capable of it after intra-oral massage has released some of the tension they carry in it.

Another useful exercise is to have the client perform jaw stabilization exercises. This is a routine of isometric jaw exercises with absolutely no movement of the jaw. This increases strength and proprioceptive control to the jaw. This will often settle down the myofascial pain clients have when they have a hypermobile jaw.

Other clients may need a night guard prescribed by their dentist, so you need to have a dentist or two that you feel comfortable referring to.

 


 

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