Abstract

Mastication and swallowing are two tightly integrated components of food intake behavior. We investigated the effects of stimulating the chewing area of the fronto-orbital cortex (CCx) on some muscles and medullary interneurons (Ins) or motoneurons (Mns) active during swallowing. For the purpose of comparison, the lingual nerve (LN) was also stimulated during the experiments. Electromyography (EMG) and extracellular neuronal recording were used, and swallowing was reflexly induced (RIS) by stimulation of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN). RIS was almost totally abolished during long-lasting repetitive stimulation of CCx or LN, and was strongly facilitated after stimulation cessation. Short-duration stimulation (one or a few pulses) of both the CCx and LN also inhibited triggering of deglutition when delivered just before the onset of RIS. This inhibition appeared as a delay or total suppression of the EMG and neuronal swallowing activities. It was obvious at the level of the muscles, the hypoglossal Mns and the premotoneurons (PMns; Ins of the ventral medulla near the nucleus ambiguus), as well as at the level of the Ins of the dorsal medulla (within or around the solitary tract nucleus) which are assumed to be the core of the `central pattern generator' (CPG) for swallowing. In addition to the `chewing-related inhibition', many ventral Ins exhibited a short latency synaptic activation after CCx and/or LN stimulation. Therefore, these Ins may play a pivotal role for reflex or cortical fast control of tongue (and jaw) muscles, and for coordinating their contractions in the context of mastication–deglutition interactions.

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