在幼年动物模型的生长发育过程中长期食用软质食物会改变其进食行为和咀嚼运动学特性

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY Journal of Morphology Pub Date : 2024-04-19 DOI:10.1002/jmor.21696
Stéphane J. Montuelle, Susan H. Williams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对于有喂养和吞咽问题的婴儿和儿童,将固体食物变为液体或泥浆可确保其获得充足的生长和营养。然而,在出生后口腔技能发育的关键时期,长期使用这种干预措施对行为和神经生理学的影响尚未得到系统研究,尽管大量轶事证据表明,这种干预措施会对下游喂养运动和协调技能产生负面影响,这可能是由于感知运动发育不成熟造成的。我们利用已建立的婴幼儿喂养生理学动物模型,通过 X 射线重建运动形态,比较了使用固体饲料(对照组)饲养的 12 周龄猪与使用软化成液体的相同饲料饲养的年龄和性别匹配的猪的喂养行为和运动学。当喂食杏仁和苹果这两种新食物时,软质饲料会减少咀嚼周期的持续时间,从而提高咀嚼频率。与对照组相比,当喂食杏仁时,该组猪摄取食物的时间更短,咀嚼周期的特点是减少了减少食物所需的下颌围绕背腹轴(偏航)的转动。在咀嚼杏仁时,猪的典型行为模式--每次咀嚼时交替咀嚼一侧的倾向也有所减少。杏仁是一种比苹果更坚硬的食物,在采食杏仁时对行为和运动学的影响更为明显,这表明食物的特性介导了早期质地改变对行为和生理的影响,而且适应不同食物特性的能力可能尚未发育成熟。相反,食物质地改变对苹果咀嚼的影响有限,这表明这种干预/处理不会改变挑战性较低的食物的喂养行为。观察到的差异不能归因于形态学,因为在治疗期间改变食物质地对颅齿生长的影响有限。在断奶后的发育过程中,软质质地的改变对喂养动态的短期影响应被视为这种处理策略的潜在负面结果。
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Prolonged use of a soft diet during early growth and development alters feeding behavior and chewing kinematics in a young animal model

In infants and children with feeding and swallowing issues, modifying solid foods to form a liquid or puree is used to ensure adequate growth and nutrition. However, the behavioral and neurophysiological effects of prolonged use of this intervention during critical periods of postnatal oral skill development have not been systematically examined, although substantial anecdotal evidence suggests that it negatively impacts downstream feeding motor and coordination skills, possibly due to immature sensorimotor development. Using an established animal model for infant and juvenile feeding physiology, we leverage X-ray reconstruction of moving morphology to compare feeding behavior and kinematics between 12-week-old pigs reared on solid chow (control) and an age- and sex-matched cohort raised on the same chow softened to a liquid. When feeding on two novel foods, almond and apple, maintenance on a soft diet decreases gape cycle duration, resulting in a higher chewing frequency. When feeding on almonds, pigs in this group spent less time ingesting foods compared to controls, and chewing cycles were characterized by less jaw rotation about a dorsoventral axis (yaw) necessary for food reduction. There was also a reduced tendency to alternate chewing side with every chew during almond chewing, a behavioral pattern typical of pigs. These more pronounced impacts on behavior and kinematics during feeding on almonds, a tougher and stiffer food than apples, suggest that food properties mediate the behavioral and physiological impacts of early texture modification and that the ability to adapt to different food properties may be underdeveloped. In contrast, the limited effects of food texture modification on apple chewing indicate that such intervention/treatment does not alter feeding behavior of less challenging foods. Observed differences cannot be attributed to morphology because texture modification over the treatment period had limited impact on craniodental growth. Short-term impacts of soft-texture modification during postweaning development on feeding dynamics should be considered as potential negative outcomes of this treatment strategy.

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来源期刊
Journal of Morphology
Journal of Morphology 医学-解剖学与形态学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
119
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Morphology welcomes articles of original research in cytology, protozoology, embryology, and general morphology. Articles generally should not exceed 35 printed pages. Preliminary notices or articles of a purely descriptive morphological or taxonomic nature are not included. No paper which has already been published will be accepted, nor will simultaneous publications elsewhere be allowed. The Journal of Morphology publishes research in functional, comparative, evolutionary and developmental morphology from vertebrates and invertebrates. Human and veterinary anatomy or paleontology are considered when an explicit connection to neontological animal morphology is presented, and the paper contains relevant information for the community of animal morphologists. Based on our long tradition, we continue to seek publishing the best papers in animal morphology.
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