PMID: 9440800Jan 24, 1998Paper

Oral motor patterns during feeding in severely physically disabled children

Brain & Development
K Yokochi

Abstract

Oral motor patterns during feeding were investigated in 58 patients with severe physical disability. Five patients showed a pattern resembling sucking. Twenty-nine exhibited an up-and-down movement of the jaw and protrusion of the tongue. Among these, the mouth opened when the food entered and the lips closed before swallowing in 20 patients; the mouth was constantly open in nine. Eight had an up-and-down movement of the jaw without protrusion of the tongue. These patterns were frequently seen in patients with spastic tetraplegia caused by neonatal asphyxia and compensated for oral motor impairment. Sixteen patients showed lateral movement of the jaw at some time during feeding; in these patients the texture of the food was more coarse than in those with other patterns.

Citations

Feb 1, 1997·Behavioural Processes·P J McLeod, J C Fentress
Feb 24, 2001·Special Care in Dentistry : Official Publication of the American Association of Hospital Dentists, the Academy of Dentistry for the Handicapped, and the American Society for Geriatric Dentistry·D Faulks, M Hennequin
Jul 25, 2009·Journal of Oral Rehabilitation·A De Oliveira Lira OrtegaM T B R Santos
Sep 13, 2014·Research in Developmental Disabilities·Katherine A BenferRoslyn N Boyd

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