Bosnian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Archives of Oral Biology 2002-Apr

A postero-anterior videofluorographic study of the intra-oral management of food in man.

Samo registrirani korisnici mogu prevoditi članke
Prijavite se / prijavite se
Veza se sprema u međuspremnik
Laurence Mioche
Karen M Hiiemae
Jeffrey B Palmer

Ključne riječi

Sažetak

Recent studies of the manipulation and reduction of food in the human mouth have used lateral-projection videofluorography (VFG) and so have concerned antero-posterior food movement. To determine the degree to which (a) food was chewed bilaterally as opposed to unilaterally, (b) the frequency of side changes, (c) the contribution of tongue and cheek activity to food manipulation, and (d) the effect of food consistency on these activities, nine young adults were recorded eating 7g cubes of four foods (banana, biscuit [cookie] and two types of meat: "tender" and "tough") in the postero-anterior projection. Videotapes recorded at 30 frames/s were acquired to disk; data were analysed as single frames and in slow-motion. As expected, the meat samples, being fibrous, required more chewing and manipulation, allowing details of the process to be established. Food was ingested in the midline; the tongue then positioned the cube on the occlusal plane of one side by a combination of pushing, tilting and twisting movements before any occlusal contact (stage I transport). During processing, food was kept on the occlusal surface by a combination of rhythmic tongue-pushing moving the food buccally (41% of cycles), and cheek-pushing (28% of cycles) returning it in the lingual direction. This reciprocating movement ensured that different parts of the food were subjected to occlusal force in successive cycles. Bilateral chewing was common and associated with either: (a) a near-symmetrical closing movement with tooth-food-tooth contact occurring almost simultaneously on both sides, or (b) an identifiable "active side" but a jaw movement extended medially to carry the lower molars through a power stroke on the "balancing" side. During the sequence, food requiring further chewing might be moved to the erstwhile balancing-side (balancing-side shift); or across the mouth to the tooth row or vestibule on the other side and "stored" for later reduction (segregation shift). Towards the end of the sequence, triturated material was moved to the midline (aggregation shift) for bolus formation and deglutition. While distinct patterns of mediolateral and vertical jaw movements seem to be associated with shift and transport cycles, these connections have not yet been established with sufficient robustness to support predictions of intra-oral events from jaw movement profiles alone.

Pridružite se našoj
facebook stranici

Najkompletnija baza ljekovitog bilja potpomognuta naukom

  • Radi na 55 jezika
  • Biljni lijekovi potpomognuti naukom
  • Prepoznavanje biljaka po slici
  • Interaktivna GPS karta - označite bilje na lokaciji (uskoro)
  • Pročitajte naučne publikacije povezane sa vašom pretragom
  • Pretražite ljekovito bilje po učincima
  • Organizirajte svoja interesovanja i budite u toku sa istraživanjem vijesti, kliničkim ispitivanjima i patentima

Upišite simptom ili bolest i pročitajte o biljkama koje bi mogle pomoći, unesite travu i pogledajte bolesti i simptome protiv kojih se koristi.
* Sve informacije temelje se na objavljenim naučnim istraživanjima

Google Play badgeApp Store badge