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Relationship between Oral Sensitivity and Masticatory Performance
1 Wageningen Centre for Food Sciences, 6700 AN Wageningen, the Netherlands; and Correspondence: * corresponding author, l.engelen{at}med.uu.nl The size of a bolus determines how it will be manipulated in the mouth and swallowed. We hypothesized that mucosal sensitivity would be important for masticatory function. The accuracy of solid object size perception, spatial acuity, and food particle size reduction during mastication were measured in 22 healthy adults with/without topical anesthesia of their oral mucosa. Topical anesthesia had no effect on the perception of sphere sizes, but significantly reduced spatial sensitivity. Without anesthesia, there was a correlation between an individuals ability to perceive the sizes of steel spheres (diameter, 4–9 mm) and the sizes of food particles chewed for 15 cycles and at swallowing. There was no correlation between spatial sensitivity and food particle size. We suggest that the stimuli used to test two-point discrimination stimulates only superficial receptors, which involve light touch and are easily anesthetized, while the spheres might excite more deeply-set receptors. The latter appear to be more important for masticatory performance and swallowing.
Key Words: oral sensitivity human size perception topical anesthesia masticatory performance
Journal of Dental Research, Vol. 83, No. 5,
388-392 (2004) This article has been cited by other articles:
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