首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
We have attempted to develop an intraoral method which can measure the textural changes in foodstuffs during chewing by using electromyography (EMG). Forty-three foodstuffs with variable textural attributes were used.

Total chewing energy for these foodstuffs during chewing varied from 3 to 108 for the masseter muscle and 13 to 154 for the digastric muscle, respectively. Large differences in total chewing energy could be observed by EMG among the foodstuffs. The chewing energy for many foodstuffs revealed distinct differences throughout the chewing process. Foodstuffs could be categorized into six groups according to the changing patterns of chewing energy. EMG data and the number of strokes were influenced by masticatory index and salivary flow rate.  相似文献   

2.
To determine if dietary texture altered the establishment, survival and reproduction of Heligmosomoides polygyrus during a primary infection, commercial mouse chow (Purina Chow) was fed in either pelleted or powdered form to 2 groups of infected BALB/c mice, and a semipurified, biotin-fortified, egg-white-based diet was provided in powdered form to a third group of mice. Diet texture (powdered vs. pelleted) modified parasite establishment, as evidenced by higher worm recovery 6 days postinfection (PI) in both groups of mice fed powdered diets compared with the group fed the pelleted diet, but diet texture had no detectable effect on net or per capita egg production or on day 30 worm survival. However, almost twice as many worms were recovered from mice fed the semipurified, powdered diet than those fed either textural formulation of the commercial mouse chow on day 30 PI, indicating that a dietary component in the semipurified diet, such as the single fiber source cellulose, facilitated parasite survival, or that other ingredients in the commercial mouse chow, perhaps the more complex fiber components, reduced worm survival, or both. We conclude that dietary texture influences parasite establishment and that specific fibers that change texture can individually and independently modify H. polygyrus survival.  相似文献   

3.
Muscle contraction patterns and mandibular movements of infant rabbits during suckling and chewing were compared. Oral muscle activity was recorded by fine-wire electromyography, while jaw movements and milk bottle pressure were registered. Suckling and mastication have a comparable cycle duration and share a common pattern of oral muscle activity which consists of a succession of a jaw closer burst, during which the jaw closes and undergoes a power stroke (in mastication), a suprahyoid burst with a stationary or slightly opening jaw and a digastric burst with fast jaw opening (the power stroke of suckling). Compared to suckling, mastication shows decreased jaw opener activity, increased jaw closer activity, development of jaw closing activity in the lateral pterygoid, and increased asymmetry in the masseter by development of a new differentiated motor pattern on the working side. The study shows that the suckling motor pattern enables the infant rabbits to change to chewing with just a few modifications.  相似文献   

4.
The active length-tension relation was determined for the left digastric muscle of seven New Zealand White rabbits anesthetized with pentobarbital. Measurements of muscle length and fiber architecture were made from photographs of resting and actively contracting muscle. There was a marked difference between length-tension curves based upon resting as compared to active muscle length. The active length-tension relation had a longer descending limb than ascending limb, whereas the length-tension relation based on passive muscle length tended to be symmetrical around optimum length. On the average, muscle fibers lengthened 0.77 mm for each 1 mm of extension of the muscle belly. Since the rabbit digastric muscle is unipinnate, this suggests that pinnation serves to enhance the range of muscle excursion in this muscle.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of external force on the X-ray pattern from frog muscles in rigor was studied by a time-resolved diffraction technique. When sinusoidal length changes (1.5–3% of the muscle length, 5Hz) were applied to the muscle, the 14.3 nm intensity decreased during the releasing phase and increased during the stretching phase. The intensity ratio of the equatorial 1,0 and 1,1 reflections did not change, nor were there any appreciable intensity changes in the 5.9 nm and 5.1 nm reflections during the length change. Experiments were also done with the relaxed muscles and no change was seen in any reflection, indicating that the rigor linkages are needed to produce the 14.3 nm intensity change. Thus the distinct effect of the length change was detected only on the 14.3 nm reflection. These results suggest no large conformational changes are induced in both the distal part of the myosin head attached to actin and the actin filament during the oscillation. It is therefore most probable that the proximal portion of myosin heads including S-2 contributes to the intensity change in response to the length change (see, also ref.21). When the muscle was stretched beyond the filament overlap, the 14.3 nm intensity change was suppressed to less than 50% of that of the slack length. It was also found that the tension change delayed the intensity change during the length oscillation. However, this delay of the tension change as observed in the muscle at the slack length was lacking in the overstretched muscle, indicating that the 14.3 nm intensity change may arise partly from a portion other than the crossbridges.  相似文献   

6.
Unlike all other primates, the digastric muscle of the orangutan lacks an anterior belly; the posterior belly, while present, inserts directly onto the mandible. To understand the functional consequences of this morphologic novelty, the EMG activity patterns of the digastric muscle and other potential mandibular depressors were studied in a gibbon and an orangutan. The results suggest a significant degree of functional differentiation between the two digastric bellies. In the gibbon, the recruitment pattern of the posterior digastric during mastication is typically biphasic. It is an important mandibular depressor, active in this role during mastication and wide opening. It also acts with the anterior suprahyoid muscles to move the hyoid prior to jaw opening during mastication. The recruitment patterns of the anterior digastric suggest that it is functionally allied to the geniohyoid and mylohyoid. For example, although it transmits the force of the posterior digastric during mandibular depression, it functions independent of the posterior digastric during swallowing. Of the muscles studied, the posterior digastric was the only muscle to exhibit major differences in recruitment pattern between the two species. The posterior digastric retains its function as a mandibular depressor in orangutans, but is never recruited biphasically, and is not active prior to opening. The unique anatomy of the digastric muscle in orangutans results in decoupling of the mechanisms for hyoid movement and mandibular depression, and during unilateral activity it potentially contributes to substantial transverse movements of the mandible. Hypotheses to explain the loss of the anterior digastric should incorporate these functional conclusions. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Frontal plane mandibular movements during mastication and the associated electromyographic (EMG) activity for left and right superficial masseter, posterior temporalis, anterior temporalis, and anterior belly of the digastric (ABD) were studied for two adult male Macaca mulatta by the new technique of “contour” analysis. Contour analysis allowed graphic and quantitative portrayal of multiple chew cycle patterns of mandibular movement and EMG activity during active mastication. A series of computer programs (ATS, ATSED, ATSXYZ) facilitated the collection, editing and definition, and finally processing of these masticatory data into contour plots. These preliminary data indicated the essential symmetry of mandibular movement patterns, high chew cycle variability inferior to occlusion, multiple centers of intense EMG activity for balancing-side superficial masseter, and no difference between working-side anterior and posterior temporalis EMG patterns. Maximum EMG amplitude was found in the area of buccal phase power stroke (BPS). Maximum EMG amplitude for ABD was located medial and inferior to occlusion; all other muscle maximum amplitudes were buccal and inferior to occlusion. The location of maximum EMG amplitudes for superficial masseter and ABD were closer to occlusion (more superior) during mastication of carrot than were maximum amplitudes during biscuit mastication. The absence of any detectable shift of EMG maximum amplitude location between biscuit and carrot for posterior and anterior temporalis suggested, along with the continuous EMG activity of working-side posterior temporalis, a secondary role for the temporalis (compensation for superficial masseter activity) during active mastication.  相似文献   

9.
We applied the technique of sonomicrometry to directly measure length changes of the trachealis muscle in vivo. Pairs of small 1-mm piezoelectric transducers were placed in parallel with the muscle fibers in the posterior tracheal wall in seven anesthetized dogs. Length changes were recorded during mechanical ventilation and during complete pressure-volume curves of the lung. The trachealis muscle showed spontaneous fluctuations in base-line length that disappeared after vagotomy. Before vagotomy passive pressure-length curves showed marked hysteresis and length changed by 18.5 +/- 13.2% (SD) resting length at functional residual capacity (LFRC) from FRC to total lung capacity (TLC) and by 28.2 +/- 16.2% LFRC from FRC to residual volume (RV). After vagotomy hysteresis decreased considerably and length now changed by 10.4 +/- 3.7% LFRC from FRC to TLC and by 32.5 +/- 14.6% LFRC from FRC to RV. Bilateral supramaximal vagal stimulation produced a mean maximal active shortening of 28.8 +/- 14.2% resting length at any lung volume (LR) and shortening decreased at lengths above FRC. The mean maximal velocity of shortening was 4.2 +/- 3.9% LR.S-1. We conclude that sonomicrometry may be used to record smooth muscle length in vivo. Vagal tone strongly influences passive length change. In vivo active shortening and velocity of shortening are less than in vitro, implying that there are significant loads impeding shortening in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
Rapid length changes were applied (within 0.2 ms or 0.4 ms) to single isometrically contracted glycerol extracted muscle fibres of the dorsal longitudinal muscle ofLethocerus maximus suspended in an Ca2+ and ATP containing solution at 20–23‡ C. Force transients and the fibre stiffness were measured during and after rapid length changes. At length changesbelow 0.5% of the initial fibre length (∼ 2.4 Μm sarcomere length) the mechanical transients were characterized as follows: (1) After stretch and after release the force regains at least partly the value of tension before the length change within a quick phase of tension recovery. The quick phase induced by stretch was nearly completed within 1–2 ms. (2) A pulse in length of 1.5 ms duration, i.e., a stretch followed by a release to the initial length or a release followed by a stretch to the initial length, was applied to the fibre. The force transient induced by this procedure regains after the second length change the value of the isometric tension before the procedure. (3) The stiffness was constant during each length change of the “pulse” and was equal during the first and the second length changes. These findings are predicted by the muscle contraction model of Huxley and Simmons (1971): The identical force before and after a length pulse may indicate that the rotation of cross bridges after the first length change is followed by a rotation into the original position after the second length change. The constancy of the stiffness during the length changes may indicate a Hookean elastic element of the cross bridge. The similarity of the stiffness during the first and the second length changes, i.e., before and after the quick phase, gives evidence that the quick phases after stretch and after release are not accompanied by a change in the net number of attached cross bridges. If stretches ofmore than 0.5% of the initial length were applied, the mechanical transient of the muscle fibre changed as follows: (1) An ultra fast tension decay phase (duration < 0.4 ms) was observed in addition to the slower decay phase induced by the smaller stretches. (2) If the initial stretch was followed by a release to the initial length, no fast recovery phase was observed, which returns the force to the value before the stretch. The reduced tension value persists for a longer period in time than 10 ms. (3) If the muscle was stretched and released repetitively an ultra fast quick phase was induced only by the first stretch. (4) The stiffness increased during stretch, but was found to be the same in the isometrically contracting muscle and after the quick tension decay phase following a large stretch. These findings indicate that the contraction model of Huxley and Simmons has to be extended by a further process additional to cross bridge rotation in case of large stretches (> 0.5%L ini). The findings are taken to indicate a rapid detachment and reattachment of overstrained cross bridges, i.e., a cross bridge slippage induced by large stretches.  相似文献   

11.
Mechanical function of hyoid muscles during spontaneous breathing in cats   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We assessed the mechanical behavior of the geniohyoid and sternohyoid muscles during spontaneous breathing using sonomicrometry in anesthetized cats. When the animals breathed O2, the hyoid muscles either became longer or did not change length (but never shortened) during inspiration. During progressive hyperoxic hypercapnia, transient increases in geniohyoid muscle inspiratory lengthening occurred in many animals; however, at high PCO2 the geniohyoid invariably shortened during inspiration (mean 4.9% of resting length at the end of CO2 rebreathing; P less than 0.001). The PCO2 at which geniohyoid inspiratory lengthening changed to inspiratory shortening was significantly higher than the CO2 threshold for the onset of geniohyoid electrical activity (P less than 0.01). For the sternohyoid muscle, hypercapnia caused inspiratory lengthening in 13 of 17 cats and inspiratory shortening in 4 of 17 cats; on average the sternohyoid lengthened by 1.6% of resting length at the end of CO2 rebreathing (P less than 0.01). Sternohyoid lengthening occurred in spite of this muscle being electrically active. These results suggest that the relationship between hyoid muscle electrical activity and respiratory changes in length is very complex, so that the presence of hyoid muscle electrical activity does not necessarily indicate muscle shortening, and among the geniohyoid and sternohyoid muscles, the geniohyoid has a primary role as a hypopharyngeal dilator in the spontaneously breathing cat, with the sternohyoid muscle acting in an accessory capacity.  相似文献   

12.
Optoelectronic analysis of mandibular movement and electromyography (EMG) of masticatory muscles in Cavia porcellus indicate bilateral, unilateral, and gnawing cycles. During bilateral and unilateral cycles, the mandibular tip moves forward, lateral, and down during the lingual phase of the power stroke to bring the teeth into occlusion. EMG activity is generally asymmetric, with the exception of activity of the temporalis muscle during bilateral cycles. During gnawing cycles, the mandible moves in an anteroposterior direction that is opposite that during bilateral and unilateral chew cycles. Bilateral and unilateral cycles of pellets were significantly longer than carrot. With the exception of the width of bilateral cycles, the magnitude of cycle width, length, and height during the mastication of carrots was greater than that during the mastication of pellets. Significant differences exist between EMG durations during mastication of pellets and carrots. The lateral pterygoid displays continuous activity during gnawing cycles. Significant differences also exist in the durations of EMG activity between the working and balancing side during all three cycle types. High level activity of balancing side temporalis and anterior belly of digastric (ABD) during bilateral cycles occurs during rotation and depression of the mandible during the power stroke. The temporalis apparently provides a ?braking”? or compensatory role during closing and power strokes. Differences between Cavia masticatory patterns and those shown by Rattus and Mesocricetus are apparently due to differences in dental morphology, occlusal relationships, and, possibly, the poorly developed temporalis in Cavia. The large number and wide diversity of rodent groups afford students of mammalian mastication an opportunity to investigate and compare different masticatory specializations.  相似文献   

13.

Background

Patients scheduled for bariatric surgery (BS) are encouraged to chew slowly in order to optimise the digestion process. The influence of dental status on patients'' ability to comply with advice on chewing behaviour is poorly documented. This study aims to compare modifications of chewing function before and after BS in three groups of obese patients differing in dental status.

Method and Findings

A cohort of 46 obese women provided three groups: FD group: fully dentate (7–10 functional dental units [FU]); PD group: partially dentate (4–6 FU) without partial dentures; DW group: partial and complete denture wearers. Chewing time (CT), number of chewing cycles (CC), and chewing frequency (CF) were measured before and after surgery during mastication of standardised samples of raw carrot, peanuts, banana, apple and jelly. The median particle-size distribution (D50) of the pre-swallowed bolus was also evaluated for peanut and carrot. Before surgery, the PD and DW groups exhibited greater mean CCs and CTs than the FD group (SNK p<0.05) and produced a bolus with higher granulometry (SNK, p<0.05) than the FD group. After surgery, CT and CC increased for all groups and for all foods, but not statistically significant for jelly. The resulting changes in bolus granulometry observed depended on both food and dental status. The granulometry of carrot bolus remained as fine or as coarse in FD and DW groups respectively as it was before surgery while it was significantly decreased in the PD group (Student''s test, p<0.001).

Conclusions

After bariatric surgery, all the obese patients, regardless of dental status modified their chewing kinematics. The effects of this chewing behaviour on bolus granulometry depended on dental status and type of food. Further studies are needed to understand better the impact of dental status on feeding behaviour and nutrition in patients with obesity.  相似文献   

14.
The fibers of the anterior belly digastric muscle of mice, fed a granulated diet for various periods, have been studied histochemically and morphometrically. The diameters of the anterior belly digastric fibers in normal mice fed only a granulated diet were smaller than those in mice fed a solid diet. Differences in the succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity of muscle fibers between op/op and normal mice gradually appeared in the anterior belly digastric muscle and, by the age of 90 days, under-development of muscle fibers was observed in the mild-belly region of the anterior belly digastric muscle of op/op mice fed a granulated diet. These results indicate mechanical stress in mastication plays an important role in the development of the anterior belly digastric muscle structures.  相似文献   

15.
We have observed the dynamics of sarcomere shortening and the diffracting action of single, functionally intact, unattached cardiac muscle cells enzymatically isolated from the ventricular tissue of adult rats. Sarcomere length was measured either (a) continuously by a light diffraction method or (b) by direct inspection of the cell's striated image as recorded on videotape or by cinemicroscopy (120--400 frames/s). At physiological levels of added CaCl2 (0.5--2.0 mM), many cells were quiescent (i.e., they did not beat spontaneously) and contracted in response to electrical stimulation (less than or equal to 1.0-ms pulse width). Sarcomere length in the quiescent, unstimulated cells (1.93 +/- 0.10 [SD] micrometers), at peak shortening (1.57 +/- 0.13 micrometers, n = 49), and the maximum velocity of sarcomere shortening and relengthening were comparable to previous observations in intact heart muscle preparations. The dispersion of light diffracted by the cell remained narrow, and individual striations remained distinct and laterally well registered throughout the shortening- relengthening cycle. In contrast, appreciable nonuniformity and internal buckling were seen at sarcomere lengths < 1.8 micrometers when the resting cell, embedded in gelatin, was longitudinally compressed These results indicate (a) that shortening and relengthening is characterized by uniform activation between myofibrils within the cardiac cell and (b) that physiologically significant relengthening forces in living heart muscle originate at the level of the cell rather than in extracellular connections. First-order diffracted light intensity, extremely variable during sarcomere shortening, was always greatest during midrelaxation preceding the onset of a very slow and uniform phase of sarcomere relengthening.  相似文献   

16.
Local movement was recorded in tetanically contracting frog sartorius muscle to estimate the nonuniformity in the distribution of compliance in the muscle preparation and the compliance that resides in the attachments of the preparation to the measuring apparatus. The stimulated muscle was also subjected to rapid length changes, and the local movements and tension responses were recorded. The results indicate that during tension development at resting length the central region of the muscle shortens at the expense of the ends. After stimulation the "shoulder" in the tension, which divided the relaxation into a slow decline and a subsequent, rather exponential decay toward zero, was accompanied by an abrupt increase in local movement. We also examined the temperature sensitivity of the two phases of relaxation. The results are consistent with the view that the decrease in tension during relaxation depends on mechanical conditions. The local movement brought about by the imposed length changes indicates that the peak value of the relative length change of the uniformly acting part was approximately 20% less than the relative length change of the whole preparation. From these observations, corrections were obtained for the compliance data derived from the tension responses. These corrections allow a comparison with data in the literature obtained from single fiber preparations. The implications for the stiffness measured during the tension responses are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
H Vilmann  S Kirkeby 《Acta anatomica》1988,131(2):108-112
Cross-sections of normal and dystrophic digastric and masseter muscles from 7- and 35- to 40-week-old mice were studied in the light microscope. Comparisons of mean cell size, cell size variance and number of centrally positioned nuclei in a given number of fibers were carried out. The masseter muscle seems at both ages to be far more affected by the disease than the digastric muscle. However, the progression of the disease from 7 to 40 weeks is more pronounced in the digastric muscle than in the masseter muscle.  相似文献   

18.
We studied the relationship between changing elbow joint angle and the power spectral density of the biceps brachii muscle electromyogram (EMG) during submaximal isometric contractions. For this purpose, we recorded the EMG of the biceps brachii muscle with surface electrodes in 13 subjects. Each subject held a 2.8-kg weight and contracted the biceps isometrically for 30 s at one of two lengths. The length of the muscle was changed by flexing the forearm toward the upper arm to form an angle of 135 degrees (L1) or 45 degrees (L2). We found that the mean centroid frequency (fc) of the EMG power spectral density was 26% lower at L1 than at L2 (P less than 0.01). For each subject there was no significant change in fc during the isometric contraction at either angle. In addition, in nine subjects who sustained fatiguing contractions of the biceps with a 6-kg load, fc decreased by 15% (P less than 0.025). These data suggest that a change in the length at which a muscle contracts isometrically can alter or induce indirectly an alteration in the frequency content of its EMG. This finding may have important implications for the assessment of respiratory muscle EMG especially during loaded breathing.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanical compliance (reciprocal of stiffness) of thin filaments was estimated from the relative compliance of single, skinned muscle fibers in rigor at sarcomere lengths between 1.8 and 2.4 micron. The compliance of the fibers was calculated as the ratio of sarcomere length change to tension change during imposition of repetitive cycles of small stretches and releases. Fiber compliance decreased as the sarcomere length was decreased below 2.4 micron. The compliance of the thin filaments could be estimated from this decrement because in this range of lengths overlap between the thick and thin filaments is complete and all of the myosin heads bind to the thin filament in rigor. Thus, the compliance of the overlap region of the sarcomere is constant as length is changed and the decrease in fiber compliance is due to decrease of the nonoverlap length of the thin filaments (the I band). The compliance value obtained for the thin filaments implies that at 2.4-microns sarcomere length, the thin filaments contribute approximately 55% of the total sarcomere compliance. Considering that the sarcomeres are approximately 1.25-fold more compliant in active isometric contractions than in rigor, the thin filaments contribute approximately 44% to sarcomere compliance during isometric contraction.  相似文献   

20.
Equatorial x-ray diffraction pattern intensities (I10 and I11), fiber stiffness and sarcomere length were measured in single, intact muscle fibers under isometric conditions and during constant velocity (ramp) shortening. At the velocity of unloaded shortening (Vmax) the I10 change accompanying activation was reduced to 50.8% of its isometric value, I11 reduced to 60.7%. If the roughly linear relation between numbers of attached bridges and equatorial signals in the isometric state also applies during shortening, this would predict 51-61% attachment. Stiffness (measured using 4 kHz sinusoidal length oscillations), another putative measure of bridge attachment, was 30% of its isometric value at Vmax. When small step length changes were applied to the preparation (such as used for construction of T1 curves), no equatorial intensity changes could be detected with our present time resolution (5 ms). Therefore, unlike the isometric situation, stiffness and equatorial signals obtained during ramp shortening are not in agreement. This may be a result of a changed crossbridge spatial orientation during shortening, a different average stiffness per attached crossbridge, or a higher proportion of single headed crossbridges during shortening.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号