If a dentist has checked a painful tooth, found no decay, cracks, or infection, and you're still hurting, TMD is a genuine possibility worth raising at your next visit.
Why TMJ pain can feel like a toothache
The trigeminal nerve is the main nerve supplying sensation to your face, jaw, and teeth — all three share the same wiring. When the jaw joint or surrounding muscles are inflamed or under strain, the brain can have trouble precisely localizing where the signal is coming from, and the pain gets perceived as coming from a tooth (or several teeth) even though the tooth itself is fine. This is called referred pain, and it's a well-established phenomenon in pain science generally, not unique to TMJ.
Separately, TMD-related clenching and grinding (bruxism) can cause real dental symptoms: enamel wear, temperature sensitivity, and uneven pressure across your bite as muscles pull the jaw unevenly. So there are actually two distinct pathways — referred pain from the joint itself, and genuine tooth sensitivity from grinding — and it's possible to have either or both.
How to tell TMJ pain from an actual dental problem
- The pain affects multiple teeth or a whole side of the mouth, rather than one specific tooth
- Dental X-rays and exams come back clean
- The pain correlates with jaw symptoms — worse after clenching, chewing, or waking up
- You notice jaw clicking, soreness, or a tired jaw feeling alongside the tooth pain
A dentist can usually distinguish the two with an exam and X-rays, so this isn't something to self-diagnose around — but it explains why the pain sometimes persists after a tooth has been ruled out.
What tends to help
If clenching and grinding are contributing, our Bruxism & Overuse Relief program addresses the habit directly. If it's more about general joint stability, the Rocabado 6x6 Program is a good foundation.