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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 3 September 1999, pp. 1529-1541
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
1Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6G 1H1, Canada; 2Institutes of Dentistry, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; 3Faculty of Dentistry, Osaka University, Osaka 565, Japan; 4Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1G6, Canada; and 5Faculty of Dentistry, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2010, Australia
Martin, Ruth E.,
Pentti Kemppainen,
Yuji Masuda,
Dongyuan Yao,
Gregory M. Murray, and
Barry J. Sessle.
Features of Cortically Evoked Swallowing in the Awake Primate
(Macaca fascicularis). J. Neurophysiol. 82: 1529-1541, 1999. Although the cerebral
cortex has been implicated in the control of swallowing, the output
organization of the cortical swallowing representation, and features of
cortically evoked swallowing, remain unclear. The present study defined
the output features of the primate "cortical swallowing
representation" with intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) applied
within the lateral sensorimotor cortex. In four hemispheres of two
awake monkeys, microelectrode penetrations were made at
1-mm
intervals, initially within the face primary motor cortex (face-MI),
and subsequently within the cortical regions immediately rostral,
lateral, and caudal to MI. Two ICMS pulse trains [35-ms train, 0.2-ms
pulses at 333 Hz,
30 µA (short train stimulus, T/S); 3- to 4-s
train, 0.2-ms pulses at 50 Hz,
60 µA (continuous stimulus, C/S)]
were applied at
500-µm intervals along each microelectrode
penetration to a depth of 8-10 mm, and electromyographic (EMG)
activity was recorded simultaneously from various orofacial and
laryngeal muscles. Evoked orofacial movements, including swallowing,
were verified by EMG analysis, and T/S and C/S movement thresholds were
determined. Effects of varying ICMS intensity on swallow-related EMG
properties were examined by applying suprathreshold C/S at selected
intracortical sites. EMG patterns of swallows evoked from various
cortical regions were compared with those of natural swallows recorded
as the monkeys swallowed liquid and solid material. Results indicated
that swallowing was evoked by C/S at ~20% of 1,569 intracortical
sites where ICMS elicited an orofacial motor response in both
hemispheres of the two monkeys, typically at C/S intensities
30 µA.
In contrast, swallowing was not evoked by T/S in either monkey.
Swallowing was evoked from four cortical regions: the ICMS-defined
face-MI, the face primary somatosensory cortex (face-SI), the region
lateral and anterior to face-MI corresponding to the cortical
masticatory area (CMA), and an area >5 mm deep to the cortical surface
corresponding to both the white matter underlying the CMA and the
frontal operculum; EMG patterns of swallows elicited from these four
cortical regions showed some statistically significant differences.
Whereas swallowing ONLY was evoked at some sites,
particularly within the deep cortical area, swallowing was more
frequently evoked together with other orofacial responses including
rhythmic jaw movements. Increasing ICMS intensity increased the
magnitude, and decreased the latency, of the swallow-related EMG burst
in the genioglossus muscle at some sites. These
findings suggest that a number of distinct cortical foci may
participate in the initiation and modulation of the swallowing synergy
as well as in integrating the swallow within the masticatory sequence.
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