Trulsson Mats, Johansson Roland S
Department of Odontology, Karolinska Institutet, SE-141 04 Huddinge, Sweden.
Behav Brain Res. 2002 Sep 20;135(1-2):27-33. doi: 10.1016/s0166-4328(02)00151-1.
We used microneurography to characterize stimulus-encoding properties of low-threshold mechanoreceptive afferents in human orofacial tissues. Signals were recorded from single afferents in the infraorbital, lingual and inferior alveolar nerves while localized, controlled, mechanical stimuli were delivered to the facial skin, lips, oral mucosa and teeth. We likewise analyzed activity in these afferents during orofacial behaviors such as speech, chewing and biting. The afferents in the soft tissues functionally resemble four types described in the human hand: hair follicle afferents, slowly adapting (SA) type I and type II afferents and fast adapting (FA) type I afferents. Afferents in the facial skin, lips and buccal mucosa respond not only to contact with environmental objects, but also to contact between the lips, changes in air pressure generated for speech sounds, and to facial skin and mucosa deformations that accompany lip and jaw movements associated with chewing and swallowing. Hence, in addition to exteroceptive information, these afferents provide proprioceptive information. In contrast, afferents terminating superficially in the tongue do not signal proprioceptive information about tongue movements in this manner. They only respond when the receptive field is brought into contact with other intraoral structures or objects, e.g. the teeth or food. All human periodontal afferents adapt slowly to maintained tooth loads. Populations of periodontal afferents encode information about both which teeth are loaded and the direction of forces applied to individual teeth. Most afferents exhibit a markedly curved relationship between discharge rate and force amplitude, featuring the highest sensitivity to changes in tooth load at low forces (below 1 N). Accordingly, periodontal afferents efficiently encode tooth load when subjects first contact, hold, and gently manipulate food by the teeth. In contrast, only a minority of the afferents encodes the rapid and strong force increase generated when biting through food. We conclude, that humans use periodontal afferent signals to control jaw actions associated with intraoral manipulation of food rather than exertion of jaw power actions.
我们使用微神经ography来表征人类口腔面部组织中低阈值机械感受性传入神经的刺激编码特性。在向面部皮肤、嘴唇、口腔黏膜和牙齿施加局部、可控的机械刺激时,记录眶下神经、舌神经和下牙槽神经中单个传入神经的信号。我们同样分析了这些传入神经在诸如说话、咀嚼和咬等口腔面部行为过程中的活动。软组织中的传入神经在功能上类似于人类手部描述的四种类型:毛囊传入神经、慢适应(SA)I型和II型传入神经以及快适应(FA)I型传入神经。面部皮肤、嘴唇和颊黏膜中的传入神经不仅对与环境物体的接触做出反应,还对嘴唇之间的接触、语音产生的气压变化以及与咀嚼和吞咽相关的嘴唇和颌骨运动所伴随的面部皮肤和黏膜变形做出反应。因此,除了外感受信息外,这些传入神经还提供本体感受信息。相比之下,在舌部浅层终止的传入神经不会以这种方式传递关于舌部运动的本体感受信息。它们仅在感受野与其他口腔内结构或物体(如牙齿或食物)接触时做出反应。所有人类牙周传入神经对持续的牙齿负荷适应缓慢。牙周传入神经群体编码有关哪些牙齿受力以及施加到单个牙齿上的力的方向的信息。大多数传入神经在放电率和力幅度之间呈现明显的曲线关系,在低力(低于1 N)时对牙齿负荷变化具有最高敏感性。因此,当受试者首次用牙齿接触、握住并轻轻操纵食物时,牙周传入神经能有效地编码牙齿负荷。相比之下,只有少数传入神经对咬穿食物时产生的快速而强烈的力增加进行编码。我们得出结论,人类利用牙周传入神经信号来控制与口腔内食物操作相关的颌骨动作,而不是颌骨动力动作的施加。