Abstract

An electromyographic (EMG) study was carried out in 40 anaesthetized rats to determine if the activity of jaw and neck muscles could be influenced by injection of the small-fibre excitant and inflammatory irritant mustard oil into the region of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). Injection of a vehicle (mineral oil, 20 μl) did not produce any significant change in EMG activity. In contrast, injection of mustard oil (20 μl, 20%) evoked increases in EMG activity in the jaw muscles but not in the neck muscles. The increased EMG activity evoked by mustard oil was reflected in 1 or 2 phases of increased activity. The early EMG increase occurred soon after the mustard oil injection (mean latency ± SD: 3.5 ± 2.3 sec), peaked within 1 min, and then subsided (mean duration: 7.5 ± 5.2 min). The later EMG increase occurred at 14.6 ± 10.0 min after the mustard oil injection and lasted 14.3 ± 12.3 min. These excitatory effects of mustard oil on the EMG activity of jaw muscles appear to have a reflex basis since they could be abolished by pre-administration of local anaesthetic into the TMJ region. These results document that TMJ injection of mustard oil results in a sustained and reversible activation of jaw muscles that may be related to the reported clinical occurrence of increased muscle activity associated with trauma to the TMJ.

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