Publications by authors named "Tim van Wessel"

Skeletal muscles have a heterogeneous fiber type composition, which reflects their functional demand. The daily muscle use and the percentage of slow-type fibers have been shown to be positively correlated in skeletal muscles of larger animals but for smaller animals there is no information. The examination of this relationship in adult rats was the purpose of this study.

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Aims: To examine the effect of mechanical loading on the induction of temporomandibular joint osteoarthrosis (TMJ OA).

Methods: Mechanical stress was applied to the rat TMJ by forced jaw opening of 3 hours a day for 5 days. The electromyographic (EMG) activity of the masseter and digastric muscles was continuously monitored by radio-telemetry.

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The jaw muscle activity of rats has been investigated for specific tasks. However, the daily jaw muscle use remains unclear. The purpose of the present study was to examine daily jaw muscle activity, and its variability over time, in the rat (n = 12) by the use of radio-telemetry.

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Postnatal changes in the fiber type composition and fiber cross-sectional area were investigated in the superficial (TEM1) and deep (TEM23) temporalis of male rabbits. It was hypothesized that, due to the transition from suckling to chewing during early postnatal development, the proportion of fast fiber types would decrease, while the proportion of fibers positive for myosin heavy chain (MyHC) cardiac alpha would increase, and that, due to the influence of testosterone during late postnatal development, the proportion of these alpha fibers would decrease again. Classification of the fibers types was performed by immunohistochemistry according to their MyHC content.

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Muscle activity has predominantly been studied for specific motor tasks not necessarily representative of normal daily behaviour. The few studies that have examined daily muscle use have quantified this by duty time, merging all levels of muscle activity. Muscle activity can also be characterized by the number, duration and level of bursts.

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The variability of the bioelectric field of the electrosensitive catfish, Ictalurus nebulosus, was investigated by recording the potential variation occurring when the fish passed a stationary electrode, and by recording the field of a stationary fish by a 15-electrode array. A good first order approximation of the recorded field of a 20 cm long fish is a dipole dc source with the source and sink about 7 cm apart, carrying a current of about 1 microA in water with a specific resistivity of 3.3 kohm cm.

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