Literature DB >> 20538841

Regional differences in length change and electromyographic heterogeneity in sternohyoid muscle during infant mammalian swallowing.

Nicolai Konow1, Allan Thexton, A W Crompton, Rebecca Z German.   

Abstract

A complex sling of muscles moves and stabilizes the hyoid bone during many mammalian behaviors. One muscle in this sling, the sternohyoid, is recruited during food acquisition, processing, and swallowing, and also during nonfeeding behaviors. We used synchronous sonomicrometry and electromyography to investigate regional (intramuscular) changes in length and electromyographic (EMG) activity of the sternohyoid during swallowing in the infant pig. The simple straplike architecture of the sternohyoid led us to hypothesize that limited regional variation in length and muscle activity would be present. We found statistically significant regional differences in EMG activity, and, with respect to length dynamics, the sternohyoid did not behave homogeneously during swallowing. The midbelly region typically shortened while the anterior and posterior regions lengthened, although in a minority of swallows (12.5%) the midbelly lengthened simultaneously with the end-regions. Despite its nonpennate architecture and evolutionarily conservative innervation, the mammalian sternohyoid appears to contain previously unrecognized populations of regionally specialized motor units. It also displays differential contraction patterns, very similar to the sternohyoid of nonmammalian vertebrates.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20538841      PMCID: PMC2928584          DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00353.2010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  62 in total

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4.  Impact of rhythmic oral activity on the timing of muscle activation in the swallow of the decerebrate pig.

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5.  Variation in EMG activity: a hierarchical approach.

Authors:  Rebecca Z German; A W Crompton; A J Thexton
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9.  Coordination of cortically induced rhythmic jaw and tongue movements in the rabbit.

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Authors:  A Kirzinger; U Jürgens
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  22 in total

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6.  The concept of hyoid posture.

Authors:  Rebecca Z German; Regina Campbell-Malone; A W Crompton; Peng Ding; Shaina Holman; Nicolai Konow; Allan J Thexton
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7.  The digastric muscle is less involved in pharyngeal swallowing in rabbits.

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8.  Regional differences in hyoid muscle activity and length dynamics during mammalian head shaking.

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9.  Development, reliability, and validation of an infant mammalian penetration-aspiration scale.

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10.  Dynamic Musculoskeletal Functional Morphology: Integrating diceCT and XROMM.

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