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Yazar "Atis, Elif Sibel" seçeneğine göre listele

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    Öğe
    Activation properties of trigeminal motoneurons in participants with and without bruxism
    (Amer Physiological Soc, 2013) D'Amico, Jessica M.; Yavuz, S. Utku; Saracoglu, Ahmet; Atis, Elif Sibel; Gorassini, Monica A.; Turker, Kemal S.
    In animals, sodium-and calcium-mediated persistent inward currents (PICs), which produce long-lasting periods of depolarization under conditions of low synaptic drive, can be activated in trigeminal motoneurons following the application of the monoamine serotonin. Here we examined if PICs are activated in human trigeminal motoneurons during voluntary contractions and under physiological levels of monoaminergic drive (e. g., serotonin and norepinephrine) using a paired motor unit analysis technique. We also examined if PICs activated during voluntary contractions are larger in participants who demonstrate involuntary chewing during sleep (bruxism), which is accompanied by periods of high monoaminergic drive. In control participants, during a slowly increasing and then decreasing isometric contraction, the firing rate of an earlier-recruited masseter motor unit, which served as a measure of synaptic input to a later-recruited test unit, was consistently lower during derecruitment of the test unit compared with at recruitment (Delta F = 4.6 +/- 1.5 imp/s). The Delta F, therefore, is a measure of the reduction in synaptic input needed to counteract the depolarization from the PIC to provide an indirect estimate of PIC amplitude. The range of Delta F values measured in the bruxer participants during similar voluntary contractions was the same as in controls, suggesting that abnormally high levels of monoaminergic drive are not continually present in the absence of involuntary motor activity. We also observed a consistent "onion skin effect" during the moderately sized contractions (<20% of maximal), whereby the firing rate of higher threshold motor units discharged at slower rates (by 4-7 imp/s) compared with motor units with relatively lower thresholds. The presence of lower firing rates in the more fatigue-prone, higher threshold trigeminal motoneurons, in addition to the activation of PICs, likely facilitates the activation of the masseter muscle during motor activities such as eating, nonnutritive chewing, clenching, and yawning.
  • Küçük Resim Yok
    Öğe
    Is Myofascial Pain in Temporomandibular Disorder Patients a Manifestation of Delayed-onset Muscle Soreness?
    (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2013) Koutris, Michail; Lobbezoo, Frank; Sumer, Nevruz Ceren; Atis, Elif Sibel; Turker, Kemal S.; Naeije, Machiel
    Objective: In a study to the possible role of overuse of the jaw muscles in the pathogenesis of jaw muscle pain, we used a protocol involving concentric and eccentric muscle contractions to provoke a state of delayed-onset muscle soreness (DOMS) in the jaw muscles of healthy individuals. We tested whether the accompanying signs and symptoms would yield the temporary diagnosis of myofascial pain according to the research diagnostic criteria for temporomandibular disorders (RDC/TMD) in these individuals. Methods: Forty persons (mean age +/- SD = 27.7 +/- 7.5 y) performed six, 5-minute bouts of eccentric and concentric jaw muscle contractions. Before and immediately after the exercise, and 24 hours, 48 hours, and 1 week later, self-reported muscle fatigue and pain, pain-free maximum mouth opening, pressure-pain thresholds, and the number of painful jaw muscle palpation sites were recorded. Results: Significant signs and symptoms of DOMS in the jaw muscles were found, which all had resolved after 1 week. In 31 (77.5%) of the participants, these signs and symptoms also gave rise to a temporary diagnosis of myofascial pain according to the RDC/TMD. Conclusions: The results of this study demonstrate that an experimental protocol involving concentric and eccentric muscle contractions can provoke DOMS in the jaw muscles and the temporary diagnosis of myofascial pain according to the RDC/TMD. The results observed strengthen the supposition that the myofascial pain in TMD patients may be a manifestation of DOMS in the jaw muscles.

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