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Trigeminal orosensation and ingestive behavior in the rat.
Authors:Jacquin  Mark F; Zeigler  H Philip
Abstract:Used a deafferentation procedure with male Wistar rats to examine the contributions of trigeminal orosensation to control of ingestive behavior. The procedure removed somatosensory input from the mouth while sparing olfaction, lingual taste, vibrissae inputs, and proprioceptive afferents from and efferents to the jaw muscles. Ss with sections of tongue or jaw muscle efferents served as controls. Bilateral trigeminal orosensory deafferentation was followed by effects on ingestive behavior, the magnitudes of which were proportional to the extent of the deafferentation. The trigeminal syndrome includes aphagia and adipsia, impairments in the sensorimotor control of eating and drinking, decreased responsiveness to food and water, and a reduction in the level of body weight regulation. Trigeminal deafferentation spared elementary ingestive movement patterns (biting, licking, and chewing) but disrupted their control by the perioral stimuli. Deficits in food intake varied with the sensory properties of the diet. Recovery of intake took place along a palatability gradient, and recovery of water intake paralleled that of dry food. The chronically reduced body weight was caused by persistent hypophagia and reflected reduced responsiveness to food. Findings suggest a considerable degree of overlap in the neural mechanisms mediating the sensorimotor and motivational control of intake in the rat. (76 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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