Effects of Food Texture and Sample Thickness on Mandibular Movement and Hardness Assessment during Biting in Man

Author:

Peyron M.A.1,Maskawi K.2,Woda A.1,Tanguay R.2,Lund J.P.2

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Physiologie Orofaciale-Unite associee INRA-Theix-Faculte de Chirurgie Dentaire, 11 Bd Charles De Gaulle, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France

2. Faculty of Dentistry, McGill University, 3650 University St., Montreal, H3A 2B2, Canada, Centre de recherche en sciences neurologiques, Universite de Montreal, Montreal, H3C 3J7, Canada

Abstract

This study was designed to investigate the relationship among jaw movements, physical characteristics of food, and sensory perception of hardness in man. Vertical movements of the mandible were recorded with an infrared tracking device in humans during biting on two test foods, carrot and cheese. Samples of standard length (2 cm) and width (2 cm) were prepared in three different thicknesses (0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 cm). Nine subjects were asked to perform two types of bite with their incisor teeth. In the first, they cut through the food, then stopped and spat out the pieces (bite alone); in the second, biting was followed by mastication and swallowing (bite+chew). The 12 conditions (thickness x3, food x2, and bite x2) were presented in a random order within each block, and blocks were repeated five times (60 trials per subject). Subjects also estimated the hardness of the samples twice for each condition on visual analogue scales (VAS) 100 mm long. The duration, vertical amplitude, and maximum vertical velocity of the mandible during biting were calculated by computer for the three phases of the movements (opening, and fast and slow closing). Multilevel statistical models were used for data analysis. The estimated hardness scores associated with the first bite of thin carrot (59.0 VAS units) was significantly greater than for cheese (16.8 VAS units). The type of bite had no significant effect on these scores, but the estimate of hardness was significantly greater for the thickest sample (+13.3 VAS units). Food type had its strongest effect on the slow-closing phase. In particular, the peak velocity that followed the fracturing of the food sample was much greater for carrot than for cheese (thin, 34.1 mm.s-1 vs. 26.6 mm.s-1), and the difference between foods increased with thickness. The amplitude of opening was significantly greater for the thickest sample than for the other two. There were no significant relationships between VAS scores and the movement parameters. These results suggest that, when humans bite food: (1) changing the thickness of food has a greater effect on movement parameters than changing from soft to hard food, (2) the parameters of biting change little if biting is followed by mastication, (3) hardness perception is dependent on the thickness of food, (4) hardness perception is not different when food is removed from the mouth than when it is chewed and swallowed, and (5) there is no relationship between any of the parameters of movement that change with food type and the perceived hardness of food.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Dentistry

Reference32 articles.

1. Amerine MA, Pangborn RM, Roessler EB (1965). Principles of sensory evaluation of food. New York and London: Academic Press, pp. 1-602.

2. A STUDY OF FORCE-COMPRESSION CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED WITH HARDNESS EVALUATION IN SEVERAL FOODS

3. Texture Profile Method

4. EFFECTS OF SAMPLE SIZE AND PRIOR MASTICATION ON TEXTURE JUDGMENTS

5. Food Texture Perception

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