The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of gender on the masseteric jaw-jerk reflex, evoked in a sample of nine male and nine female young subjects. Electromyographic jaw-jerk recordings elicited by chin-taps in the relaxed masseter muscle of the preferred chewing side, were obtained using a computerized recording and analysis system. In both groups, a jaw-jerk reflex was recorded in 95.56% out of the total number of chin-taps. The mean latency was significantly shorter in the females (5.75 ms) than in the males (6.14 ms, P = 0.0045), while the amplitude of the reflex was significantly higher in the females (P = 0.0005). No significant differences were found in the mean duration between males (6.86 ms) and females (6.73 ms). It was concluded that sex variation should be taken into consideration in the interpretation of the jaw-jerk reflex.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2842.1994.tb01156.xDOI Listing

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