EMG study on the effect of ageing on the human masseteric jaw‐jerk reflex

Abstract
The effect of age on the masseteric jaw-jerk reflex was investigated in 22 young (11 males and 11 females with mean age 23.2 years) and 22 older dentate subjects (11 males and 11 females with mean age 61.3 years). Electromyographic (EMG) recordings were obtained, after chin taps, from the relaxed masseter muscle of the preferred chewing side, by use of a computerised recording and analysis system. With increasing age the occurrence of the reflex was reduced, the latency was increased, while the amplitude was decreased. Those findings are probably related to the general age related changes in the muscular tissue, the sense organs, the peripheral nerves and especially the central nervous system. Increased biological variance was also observed in the older subjects, as in most aspects of performance in the latent years. Furthermore, the effects of ageing were generally similar in men and women. The age-related decrement in the monosynaptic reflex response is indicative of a generalised decline in the motor performance of the stomatognathic system and the decreased ability of the older dental patient to easily adapt to any dramatic changes in the sensory input.

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