Mastication and swallowing: influence of fluid addition to foods

Authors

  • Luciano José Pereira University of Vale do Rio Verde; Dental School of Três Corações; Department of Clinical Dentistry
  • Maria Beatriz Duarte Gavião State University of Campinas; Dental School of Piracicaba; Department of Pediatric Dentistry
  • Lina Engelen University Medical Center; Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Prosthodontics and Special Dental Care, Oral Physiology Group
  • Andries Van der Bilt University Medical Center; Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Prosthodontics and Special Dental Care, Oral Physiology Group

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572007000100012

Keywords:

Saliva, Mastication, Swallowing, Food, Muscle activity

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The production of sufficient saliva is indispensable for good chewing. Recent research has demonstrated that salivary flow rate has little influence on the swallowing threshold. OBJECTIVES: The hypothesis examined in the present study was that adding fluids to foods will influence chewing physiology. Materials and METHODS: Twenty subjects chewed on melba toast, cake, carrot, peanut and Gouda cheese. They also chewed on these foods after addition of different volumes of water or alpha-amylase solution. Jaw muscle activity, number of chewing cycles until swallowing and chewing cycle duration were measured. Repeated measures analysis of variance was applied to test the null hypothesis that there would be no statistically significant difference among the results obtained for the various food types and fluids. Subsequently, contrasts were determined to study the levels of intra-subjects factors (food type and fluid volume). Linear regression was used to determine the changes in muscle activity and cycle duration as a function of the chewing cycles. RESULTS: Fluid addition significantly decreased muscle activity and swallowing threshold for melba, cake and peanut (p<0.05). The effect of alpha-amylase in the solutions was similar to that of water (p>;0.05). Doubling the volume of tap water had a greater effect. CONCLUSIONS: Fluid addition facilitated chewing of dry foods (melba, cake), but did not influence the chewing of fatty (cheese) and wet products (carrot). This study is relevant to improve patients' life quality and the management of chewing and feeding disorders caused by hyposalivation.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2007-02-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Mastication and swallowing: influence of fluid addition to foods . (2007). Journal of Applied Oral Science, 15(1), 55-60. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572007000100012