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Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training

INTRODUCTION: Good balance is essential for human daily life as it may help to improve the quality of life and reduce the risk of falls and associated injuries. The influence of jaw clenching on balance control has been shown under static and dynamic conditions. Nevertheless, it has not yet been inv...

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Autores principales: Fadillioglu, Cagla, Kanus, Lisa, Möhler, Felix, Ringhof, Steffen, Hellmann, Daniel, Stein, Thorsten
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10327569/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37426440
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1140712
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author Fadillioglu, Cagla
Kanus, Lisa
Möhler, Felix
Ringhof, Steffen
Hellmann, Daniel
Stein, Thorsten
author_facet Fadillioglu, Cagla
Kanus, Lisa
Möhler, Felix
Ringhof, Steffen
Hellmann, Daniel
Stein, Thorsten
author_sort Fadillioglu, Cagla
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Good balance is essential for human daily life as it may help to improve the quality of life and reduce the risk of falls and associated injuries. The influence of jaw clenching on balance control has been shown under static and dynamic conditions. Nevertheless, it has not yet been investigated whether the effects are mainly associated with the dual-task situation or are caused by jaw clenching itself. Therefore, this study investigated the effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance prior to and after 1 week of jaw clenching training. It was hypothesized that jaw clenching has stabilizing effects resulting in a better dynamic reactive balance performance, and these effects are not related to dual-task benefits. METHODS: A total of 48 physically active and healthy adults (20 women and 28 men) were distributed into three groups, one habitual control group (HAB) and two jaw clenching groups (JAW and INT) that had to clench their jaws during the balance tasks at T1 and T2. One of those two groups, the INT group, additionally practiced the jaw clenching task for 1 week, making it familiar and implicit at T2. The HAB group did not receive any instruction regarding jaw clenching condition. Dynamic reactive balance was assessed using an oscillating platform perturbed in one of four directions in a randomized order. Kinematic and electromyographic (EMG) data were collected using a 3D motion capture system and a wireless EMG system, respectively. Dynamic reactive balance was operationalized by the damping ratio. Furthermore, the range of motion of the center of mass (CoM) in perturbation direction (RoM(CoM_AP) or RoM(CoM_ML)), as well as the velocity of CoM (V(CoM)) in 3D, were analyzed. The mean activity of the muscles relevant to the perturbation direction was calculated to investigate reflex activities. RESULTS: The results revealed that jaw clenching had no significant effects on dynamic reactive balance performance or CoM kinematics in any of these three groups, and the automation of jaw clenching in the INT group did not result in a significant change either. However, high learning effects, as revealed by the higher damping ratio values and lower V(CoM) at T2, were detected for the dynamic reactive balance task even without any deliberate balance training in the intervention phase. In the case of backward perturbation of the platform, the soleus activity in a short latency response phase increased for the JAW group, whereas it decreased for HAB and INT after the intervention. In the case of forward acceleration of the platform, JAW and INT showed a higher tibialis anterior muscle activity level in the medium latency response phase compared to HAB at T1. DISCUSSION: Based on these findings, it can be suggested that jaw clenching may lead to some changes in reflex activities. However, the effects are limited to anterior–posterior perturbations of the platform. Nevertheless, high learning effects may have overall overweighed the effects related to jaw clenching. Further studies with balance tasks leading to less learning effects are needed to understand the altered adaptations to a dynamic reactive balance task related to simultaneous jaw clenching. Analysis of muscle coordination (e.g., muscle synergies), instead of individual muscles, as well as other experimental designs in which the information from other sources are reduced (e.g., closed eyes), may also help to reveal jaw clenching effects.
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spelling pubmed-103275692023-07-08 Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training Fadillioglu, Cagla Kanus, Lisa Möhler, Felix Ringhof, Steffen Hellmann, Daniel Stein, Thorsten Front Neurol Neurology INTRODUCTION: Good balance is essential for human daily life as it may help to improve the quality of life and reduce the risk of falls and associated injuries. The influence of jaw clenching on balance control has been shown under static and dynamic conditions. Nevertheless, it has not yet been investigated whether the effects are mainly associated with the dual-task situation or are caused by jaw clenching itself. Therefore, this study investigated the effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance prior to and after 1 week of jaw clenching training. It was hypothesized that jaw clenching has stabilizing effects resulting in a better dynamic reactive balance performance, and these effects are not related to dual-task benefits. METHODS: A total of 48 physically active and healthy adults (20 women and 28 men) were distributed into three groups, one habitual control group (HAB) and two jaw clenching groups (JAW and INT) that had to clench their jaws during the balance tasks at T1 and T2. One of those two groups, the INT group, additionally practiced the jaw clenching task for 1 week, making it familiar and implicit at T2. The HAB group did not receive any instruction regarding jaw clenching condition. Dynamic reactive balance was assessed using an oscillating platform perturbed in one of four directions in a randomized order. Kinematic and electromyographic (EMG) data were collected using a 3D motion capture system and a wireless EMG system, respectively. Dynamic reactive balance was operationalized by the damping ratio. Furthermore, the range of motion of the center of mass (CoM) in perturbation direction (RoM(CoM_AP) or RoM(CoM_ML)), as well as the velocity of CoM (V(CoM)) in 3D, were analyzed. The mean activity of the muscles relevant to the perturbation direction was calculated to investigate reflex activities. RESULTS: The results revealed that jaw clenching had no significant effects on dynamic reactive balance performance or CoM kinematics in any of these three groups, and the automation of jaw clenching in the INT group did not result in a significant change either. However, high learning effects, as revealed by the higher damping ratio values and lower V(CoM) at T2, were detected for the dynamic reactive balance task even without any deliberate balance training in the intervention phase. In the case of backward perturbation of the platform, the soleus activity in a short latency response phase increased for the JAW group, whereas it decreased for HAB and INT after the intervention. In the case of forward acceleration of the platform, JAW and INT showed a higher tibialis anterior muscle activity level in the medium latency response phase compared to HAB at T1. DISCUSSION: Based on these findings, it can be suggested that jaw clenching may lead to some changes in reflex activities. However, the effects are limited to anterior–posterior perturbations of the platform. Nevertheless, high learning effects may have overall overweighed the effects related to jaw clenching. Further studies with balance tasks leading to less learning effects are needed to understand the altered adaptations to a dynamic reactive balance task related to simultaneous jaw clenching. Analysis of muscle coordination (e.g., muscle synergies), instead of individual muscles, as well as other experimental designs in which the information from other sources are reduced (e.g., closed eyes), may also help to reveal jaw clenching effects. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10327569/ /pubmed/37426440 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1140712 Text en Copyright © 2023 Fadillioglu, Kanus, Möhler, Ringhof, Hellmann and Stein. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neurology
Fadillioglu, Cagla
Kanus, Lisa
Möhler, Felix
Ringhof, Steffen
Hellmann, Daniel
Stein, Thorsten
Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training
title Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training
title_full Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training
title_fullStr Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training
title_full_unstemmed Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training
title_short Effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training
title_sort effects of jaw clenching on dynamic reactive balance task performance after 1-week of jaw clenching training
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10327569/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37426440
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1140712
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