Abstract: | For studying the role of orosensory input in the control of ingestive behavior, 46 male albino Wistar rats were subjected to varying degrees of trigeminal deafferentation in 2 experiments. Somatosensory branches that convey touch, temperature, and pain from the oral cavity were sectioned selectively, and muscles of mastication and taste afferents were left intact. Severe intake deficits were produced, including aphagia, adipsia, and prolonged hypophagia, accompanied by a corresponding decrease in body weight. The deficits were proportional to the extent of deafferentation and were most severe when upper and lower portions of the mouth were affected. Although somatosensory impairment affected the organization of the consummatory response, all Ss could bite, chew, and lick. Analysis of feeding patterns showed that minimally (mandibular) deafferented Ss compensated for the consummatory inefficiency by increasing meal duration but failed to initiate meals at the normal rate, thus keeping food intake below normal levels. Results suggest that oral somatosensory input is critical for the mechanisms that regulate ingestive behavior. (45 ref)) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |