Objective: To investigate whether pain catastrophizing and personality traits bias recalled ratings of acute pain in an experimental tonic pain model.
Subjects And Setting: Fifty-six undergraduates (14 males) recruited from the University of Peradeniya (mean age 21.7 ± 0.
Background: Primarily deep approach (DA) and surface approach (SA) to learning have been distinguished among students.
Purpose: We aimed to determine the learning approaches and their association with the academic performance of a batch of 1st-year Sri Lankan dental students.
Methods: Learning scores of students were calculated using the revised two-factor study process (R-SPQ-2F) questionnaire and they were correlated with the academic performance of students.
It has been reported that the jaw opening reflex (JOR) evoked by intra-oral innocuous stimulation was suppressed during a reflex swallow in anesthetized animals only. However, the mechanism of JOR inhibition during swallowing has not yet been elucidated. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of peripheral nerve stimulation on masticatory behaviors, as well as the modulation of low threshold afferent evoked JOR responses during chewing and swallowing in freely feeding animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo clarify the functional role of cortical descending inputs involved in the swallowing reflex, the effect of electrical stimulation of two cortical masticatory areas (CMAs: A- and P-area) on rhythmic jaw movements (RJMs) and superior laryngeal nerve (SLN)-evoked swallows were studied. RJMs and swallowing reflex were elicited by repetitive electrical stimulation of CMAs and the SLN, respectively. The electromyographic activities of jaw-closer (masseter), jaw-opener (digastric), and laryngeal-elevator (thyrohyoid) muscles were recorded to identify the RJMs and swallowing reflex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChanges in reflex responses in the genioglossus (GG) muscle evoked by electrical stimulation of the inferior alveolar nerve and GG muscle tone (background activity, BGA) were investigated during sleep-wakefulness stages in rabbits. The GG muscle showed two types of electromyographic activity patterns: a respiration-related phasic activity and non-respiration-related activity. GG reflex responses and BGA exhibited a stage-dependent decrease as they were constantly suppressed from quiet wakefulness to non-rapid eye movement sleep to rapid eye movement sleep (REMS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of physical characteristics of foods on the coordination of extrinsic tongue muscle activities during natural mastication were evaluated. Electromyograms of tongue-retractor (styloglossus, SG) and tongue-protractor (genioglossus, GG) muscles as well as the jaw-movement trajectories were recorded during raw rice and chow pellet chewing in the freely moving rabbit. Each masticatory cycle included a jaw closing (Cl) phase consisting of a fast-closing (FC) and a slow-closing (SC) phase, and a jaw opening (Op) phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo evaluate the coordination of tongue and suprahyoid muscle activities during natural mastication, electromyograms (EMGs) of jaw-closer, jaw-opener, suprahyoid (mylohyoid, MH), tongue-retractor (styloglossus, SG) and tongue-protractor (genioglossus, GG) muscles were recorded as well as the jaw-movement trajectories in vertical and horizontal axes in awake rabbits. Each masticatory cycle had three components including the fast-closing (FC), slow-closing (SC) and opening (Op) phases. The duration of the SC phase was much longer during pellet chewing while the durations of the FC and Op phases were much shorter during pellet chewing than bread or banana chewing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo clarify the jaw-closer and tongue-retractor muscle activity patterns during mastication, electromyographic activity of the styloglossus (SG) as a tongue-retractor and masseter (Mass) as a jaw-closer muscles as well as jaw-movement trajectories were recorded during cortically evoked rhythmic jaw movements (CRJMs) in anesthetized rabbits. The SG and Mass muscles were mainly active during the jaw-closing (Cl) phase. The SG activity was composed of two bursts in one masticatory cycle; one had its peak during the jaw-opening (Op) phase (SG1 burst) and the other during the Cl phase (SG2 burst).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenioglossus (Gg) reflexes elicited by electrical stimulation of the inferior alveolar nerve were examined in naturally chewing rabbits. To eliminate possible contaminations of the digastric (Dig) activity in the Gg responses, the Dig nerve was denervated bilaterally. Masticatory and tongue muscles were well coordinated during chewing after the denervation; i.
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