Role of mastication and swallowing in the control of autonomic nervous activity for heart rate in different postures

summary  Mastication and swallowing increase the heart rate, and posture change and respiration also modulate the heart rate. To clarify the role of mastication and swallowing in the modulation of the autonomic nervous activity, we investigated how they interact with modulation of the heart rate by...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of oral rehabilitation Vol. 30; no. 12; pp. 1209 - 1215
Main Authors Nitta, E., Iwasa, Y., Sugita, M., Hirono, C., Shiba, Y.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Science Ltd 01.12.2003
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Summary:summary  Mastication and swallowing increase the heart rate, and posture change and respiration also modulate the heart rate. To clarify the role of mastication and swallowing in the modulation of the autonomic nervous activity, we investigated how they interact with modulation of the heart rate by changing body positions and respiration in young healthy subjects. R–R intervals of electrocardiogram at rest were significantly changed with different body positions, compared with supine and standing. A net shortening by mastication of a chewing gum base was similar in various postures. Respiration induced a periodic change in the R–R intervals, depending on the body postures, but mastication did not markedly change them in each posture. Dry swallowing at rest and spontaneous swallowing during the mastication in the sitting position induced a similar transient shortening and suppressed the respiration‐induced changes after the swallowing. The net transient shortening by dry swallowing at rest was similar in the different postures. These results suggest that signals from mastication and swallowing are summated with those from body positions and respiration for shortening the R–R intervals and that signals from swallowing suppress the respiration‐induced periodic changes.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-J1GDTZV6-5
ArticleID:JOOR1196
istex:C0A183BEE92B75C3EECF31F38B62A9AE03A432E8
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:0305-182X
1365-2842
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2842.2003.01196.x