Abstract

When eating, mastication is always followed by swallowing. The present study assessed the effect of mastication on swallowing-related neural pathways in humans. Twenty healthy volunteers participated and underwent baseline transcranial magnetic stimulation to evaluate cortico-pharyngeal and cortico-hand motor-evoked potentials (MEPs). Next, they performed a chewing task and a swallowing task. Repeated-measures ANOVA revealed that pharyngeal MEPs were significantly higher after the swallowing task than after the chewing task, even though the number of swallows across tasks was matched. This implies that chewing movements suppress swallowing-related activity in the pharyngeal motor circuit.

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