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Control of human mandibular posture during locomotion
Mandibular movements and masseter muscle activity were measured in humans during hopping, walking and running to determine whether reflexes contribute to the maintenance of jaw position during locomotion. In initial experiments, subjects hopped so that they landed either on their toes or on their he...
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Published in: | The Journal of physiology 2004-01, Vol.554 (1), p.216-226 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Mandibular movements and masseter muscle activity were measured in humans during hopping, walking and running to determine
whether reflexes contribute to the maintenance of jaw position during locomotion. In initial experiments, subjects hopped
so that they landed either on their toes or on their heel. Landing on the toes provoked only small mandibular movements and
no reflex responses in the masseter electromyogram (EMG). Landing on the heels with the jaw muscles relaxed caused the mandible
to move vertically downwards relative to the maxilla, and evoked a brisk reflex response in the masseter at monosynaptic latency.
Neither this relative movement of the mandible nor the reflex was seen when the teeth were clenched: hence the reflex is not
the result of vestibular activation during head movement. The same variables were measured in a second series of experiments
while subjects stood, walked and ran at various speeds and at various inclinations on a treadmill. During walking, the vertical
movements of the head and therefore the mandible were slow and small, and there was no tonic masseter EMG or gait-related
activity in the jaw-closing muscles. When subjects ran, the vertical head and jaw movement depended on the running speed and
the inclination of the treadmill. Landing on the heels induced larger movements than landing on the toes. About 10 ms after
each foot-strike, the mandible moved downwards relative to the maxilla, thereby stretching the jaw-closing muscles and activating
them at segmental reflex latency. This caused the mandible to move back upwards. The strength of the reflex response was related
to the speed and amplitude of the vertical jaw movement following landing. It is concluded that, during walking, the small,
slow movements of the mandible relative to the maxilla are subthreshold for stretch reflexes in the jaw muscles: i.e. the
mandible is supported by visco-elasticity of the soft tissues in the masticatory system. However, the brisker downward movements
of the mandible after heel-landing during hopping and running evoke segmental reflex responses which contribute to the active
maintenance of the posture of the mandible. This is a unique demonstration of how a stretch reflex operates to maintain posture
under entirely natural conditions. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2003.050443 |