Cho Catherine, Louie Ke'ale, Maawadh Ahmed, Gerstner Geoffrey E
Department of Orthodontics and Pediatric Dentistry, School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1078, USA.
Oral Health Sciences PhD Program School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1078, USA.
Arch Oral Biol. 2015 Nov;60(11):1667-74. doi: 10.1016/j.archoralbio.2015.08.004. Epub 2015 Aug 12.
To study and compare the relationships between mean chewing cycle duration, selected cephalometric variables representing mandibular length, face height, etc., measured in women and in their teenage or young-adult biological daughters.
Daughters were recruited from local high schools and the University of Michigan School of Dentistry. Selection criteria included healthy females with full dentition, 1st molar occlusion, no active orthodontics, no medical conditions nor medication use that could interfere with normal masticatory motor function. Mothers had to be biologically related to their daughters. All data were obtained in the School of Dentistry. Measurements obtained from lateral cephalograms included: two "jaw length" measures, condylion-gnathion and gonion-gnathion, and four measures of facial profile including lower anterior face height, and angles sella-nasion-A point (SNA), sella-nasion-B point (SNB) and A point-nasion-B point (ANB). Mean cycle duration was calculated from 60 continuous chewing cycles, where a cycle was defined as the time between two successive maximum jaw openings in the vertical dimension. Other variables included subject height and weight. Linear and logistic regression analyses were used to evaluate the mother-daughter relationships and to study the relationships between cephalometric variables and chewing cycle duration.
Height, weight, Co-Gn and Go-Gn were significantly correlated between mother-daughter pairs; however, mean cycle duration was not (r(2)=0.015). Mean cycle duration was positively correlated with ANB and height in mothers, but negatively correlated with Co-Gn in daughters.
Chewing rate is not correlated between mothers and daughters in humans.
研究并比较女性及其处于青少年期或年轻成年期的亲生女儿的平均咀嚼周期时长与代表下颌长度、面高等的选定头影测量变量之间的关系。
从当地高中和密歇根大学牙科学院招募女儿。入选标准包括牙列完整、第一磨牙咬合正常、无正在进行的正畸治疗、无可能干扰正常咀嚼运动功能的疾病或药物使用的健康女性。母亲必须与女儿有血缘关系。所有数据均在牙科学院获取。从侧位头影测量图获得的测量值包括:两个“颌骨长度”测量值,即髁突点-颏下点和角点-颏下点,以及四个面部轮廓测量值,包括下前面部高度,以及蝶鞍-鼻根点-A点(SNA)、蝶鞍-鼻根点-B点(SNB)和A点-鼻根点-B点(ANB)角。平均周期时长由60个连续咀嚼周期计算得出,其中一个周期定义为垂直方向上两次连续最大张口之间的时间。其他变量包括受试者的身高和体重。使用线性和逻辑回归分析来评估母女关系,并研究头影测量变量与咀嚼周期时长之间的关系。
母女对之间的身高、体重、Co-Gn和Go-Gn显著相关;然而,平均周期时长不相关(r(2)=0.015)。母亲的平均周期时长与ANB和身高呈正相关,但女儿的平均周期时长与Co-Gn呈负相关。
人类母女之间的咀嚼速率不相关。