Purpose: To compare ultrasonography (US) measures and symptoms between temporomandibular disorders (TMD) and non-TMD groups and to quantify the incremental diagnostic value of US beyond a clinical-psychosocial core.Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study included 57 adults (28 with TMD; 29 without TMD) assessed using the Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Disorders.US measured the lateral condyle-capsule distance and masseter thickness.The clinical-psychosocial core comprised pain intensity and disability, jaw function, oral behaviors, central sensitization, pain distribution, and pressure pain thresholds.Penalized logistic regression with paired nested cross-validation was used to compare 3 models: A (core), B (US only), and C (combined).Performance was evaluated using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) and Brier score.Incremental value was assessed using paired changes in AUC, net reclassification improvement, integrated discrimination improvement, and decisioncurve analysis.Results: Anthropometric characteristics did not differ between groups.US measures showed no between-group differences, whereas psychosocial and pain-related measures did.Model A demonstrated good discrimination (AUC = 0.827).The US-only model performed poorly, and adding US to the core did not improve performance (AUC = 0.781); the paired difference in AUC was -0.051 (95% CI: -0.115 to 0.004).Reclassification and decision-curve analyses favored the core model.Sensitivity analyses (all pressure pain threshold sites and multiple imputation) yielded consistent results.Conclusion: US did not provide incremental diagnostic value beyond a clinical-psychosocial core for TMD classification and tended to worsen reclassification and clinical utility.Routine ultrasonography for general TMD diagnosis appears unwarranted and may be reserved for targeted structural indications.Larger, validated studies are needed.
Delgado-Delgado et al. (Thu,) studied this question.