Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Oral Pathophysiology, Department of Oral-Maxillofacial Surgery, Prosthodontics and Special Dental Care, Faculty of Medicine, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 80.037, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands
Abstract
The muscle spindles of the jaw elevator muscles provide positive feedback to the alpha motoneurons. It is generally assumed that the feedback is modulated during chewing so that counterproductive forces of the jaw elevator muscles can be avoided during jaw opening. Our aim was to investigate the modulation of the muscle spindle input to the alpha motoneurons during various phases of open-close movements in man. To that end, subjects made rhythmic open-close movements at their natural chewing frequency. A force impulse (5 N, 10 ms), eliciting a jaw-jerk reflex, was unexpectedly applied. The impulse was applied to the mandible at 8 different phases during an open-close cycle, but only 1 impulse per cycle. Jaw movement and surface EMG of the masseter and temporal muscles on both sides were recorded during 3 cycles without an impulse and 3 succeeding cycles with an impulse. To examine whether the modulation of the mandibular stretch reflex sensitivity depends on the food resistance, we applied an additional external force on the mandible, counteracting closing of the jaw each cycle. Two experimental sessions were performed in random order, i.e., without force and with an additional force of 20 N. We observed pronounced reflexes at the onset of jaw closing, during the closing phase, and at occlusion. No or only weak jaw-jerk reflexes were present during jaw opening. The reflex amplitudes at occlusion were larger when an external force was present. This increase in reflex amplitude may be the result of an adjusted gamma motoneuron activity, from pre-motor inhibition, or from both. The reflex amplitudes elicited during jaw closing were not correlated with the phase of the movement.
Cited by
36 articles.
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