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J Neurophysiol 93: 2739-2751, 2005. First published December 15, 2004; doi:10.1152/jn.01005.2004
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A Sound-Evoked Vestibulomasseteric Reflex in Healthy Humans

Franca Deriu1, Eusebio Tolu1 and John C. Rothwell2

1Department of Biomedical Sciences, Section of Human Physiology and Bioengineering, University of Sassari, Sassari, Italy; and 2Sobell Research Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, United Kingdom

Submitted 23 November 2004; accepted in final form 8 December 2004

Averaged responses to loud clicks were recorded in the unrectified and rectified masseter electromyogram (EMG) of 18 healthy subjects. Unilateral clicks (0.1 ms, 3 Hz, 70–100 dB NHL), delivered during a steady masseter contraction, evoked bilateral responses that appeared to consist of 2 components on the basis of threshold, latency, and their appearance in rectified EMG. The lowest threshold response appeared as a p16 wave (onset 11–13 ms) in the unrectified EMG and corresponded with a 10- to 12-ms period of inhibition in the rectified EMG. Higher-intensity clicks recruited an earlier p11 response in the unrectified EMG (onset 7.0–9.2 ms) that sometimes appeared as an initial increase in the rectified EMG before suppression. The amplitude of the p11 wave scaled with background EMG level and was asymmetrically modulated by 30° tilt of the whole body. The threshold of the early p11/n15 wave in masseter was the same as the threshold for click-induced vestibulocollic reflexes. Single motor unit recordings demonstrated that responses in masseters corresponded to a silent period in unit firing that began earlier and lasted longer at 100 dB than at 80 dB. We propose that loud clicks induce 2 partially overlapping short-latency reflexes in masseter muscle EMG: a p11/n15 response, which we suggest is of vestibular origin, and a p16/n21 response, which we suggest is equivalent to the previously described jaw–acoustic reflex.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: F. Deriu, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Section of Human Physiology and Bioengineering, Viale San Pietro 43/b, 07100 Sassari, Italy (E-mail: deriuf{at}uniss.it)




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