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Reflex responses of masseter muscles to sound
Authors:Franca Deriu  Elena Giaconi  John C Rothwell  Eusebio Tolu
Institution:1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Sassari, Sassari, Italy;2. Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK
Abstract:Acoustic stimuli can evoke reflex EMG responses (acoustic jaw reflex) in the masseter muscle. Although these were previously ascribed to activation of cochlear receptors, high intensity sound can also activate vestibular receptors. Since anatomical and physiological studies, both in animals and humans, have shown that masseter muscles are a target for vestibular inputs we have recently reassessed the vestibular contribution to masseter reflexes. We found that high intensity sound evokes two bilateral and symmetrical short-latency responses in active unrectified masseter EMG of healthy subjects: a high threshold, early p11/n15 wave and a lower threshold, later p16/n21 wave. Both of these reflexes are inhibitory but differ in their threshold, latency and appearance in the rectified EMG average. Experiments in healthy subjects and in patients with selective lesions showed that vestibular receptors were responsible for the p11/n15 wave (vestibulo-masseteric reflex) whereas cochlear receptors were responsible for the p16/n21 wave (acoustic masseteric reflex). The possible functional significance of the double vestibular control over masseter muscles is discussed.
Keywords:Vestibulo-masseteric reflex  Acoustic masseteric reflex  Acoustic stimulation  Jaw muscles  Brainstem  Trigeminal motor system
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