Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Nagasaki University, 1-7-1 Sakamoto, Nagasaki, 852-8588, Japan.
Department of Orthodontics, Nagasaki University Hospital, 1-7-1 Sakamoto, Nagasaki, 852-8588, Japan.
BMC Oral Health. 2021 Oct 14;21(1):527. doi: 10.1186/s12903-021-01879-4.
Mastication is one of the most fundamental functions for the conservation of human life. To clarify the pathogenetic mechanism of various oral dysfunctions, the demand for devices for evaluating stomatognathic function has been increasing. The aim of the present study was to develop a system to reconstruct and visualize 3-dimensional (3D) mandibular movements relative to the maxilla, including dynamic transition of occlusal contacts between the upper and lower dentitions during mastication in mice.
First, mandibular movements with six degrees of freedom were measured using a motion capture system comprising two high-speed cameras and four reflective markers. Second, 3D models of maxillofacial structure were reconstructed from micro-computed tomography images. Movement trajectories of anatomical landmark points on the mandible were then reproduced by integrating the kinematic data of mandibular movements with the anatomical data of maxillofacial structures. Lastly, 3D surface images of the upper dentition with the surrounding maxillofacial structures were transferred to each of the motion capture images to reproduce mandibular movements relative to the maxilla. We also performed electromyography (EMG) of masticatory muscles associated with mandibular movements.
The developed system could reproduce the 3D movement trajectories of arbitrary points on the mandible, such as incisor, molars and condylar points with high accuracy and could visualize dynamic transitions of occlusal contacts between upper and lower teeth associated with mandibular movements.
The proposed system has potential to elucidate the mechanisms underlying motor coordination of masticatory muscles and to clarify their roles during mastication by taking advantage of the capability to record EMG data synchronously with mandibular movements. Such insights will enhance our understanding of the pathogenesis and diagnosis of oral motor disorders by allowing comparisons between normal mice and genetically modified mice with oral behavioral dysfunctions.
咀嚼是维持人类生命的最基本功能之一。为了阐明各种口腔功能障碍的发病机制,对评估咀嚼功能的设备的需求不断增加。本研究旨在开发一种系统,以重建和可视化下颌相对于上颌的 3 维(3D)运动,包括在咀嚼过程中上下牙之间的咬合接触的动态过渡。
首先,使用由两个高速摄像机和四个反射标记组成的运动捕捉系统测量下颌的 6 自由度运动。其次,从微计算机断层扫描图像重建颌面结构的 3D 模型。然后,通过将下颌运动的运动学数据与颌面结构的解剖学数据相结合,再现下颌解剖学标志点的运动轨迹。最后,将上颌牙齿的 3D 表面图像与周围的颌面结构转移到每个运动捕捉图像中,以再现下颌相对于上颌的运动。我们还对与下颌运动相关的咀嚼肌进行了肌电图(EMG)记录。
该系统能够以高精度再现下颌任意点的 3D 运动轨迹,如切牙、磨牙和髁突点,并且能够可视化与下颌运动相关的上下牙咬合接触的动态过渡。
该系统具有记录下颌运动和咀嚼肌 EMG 数据的同步能力,有望阐明咀嚼肌运动协调的机制,并通过比较正常小鼠和具有口腔行为障碍的遗传修饰小鼠,阐明它们在咀嚼过程中的作用。这将通过允许比较正常小鼠和具有口腔行为障碍的遗传修饰小鼠,增强我们对口腔运动障碍的发病机制和诊断的理解。