仔猪在喂养过程中表现出对多种生理功能的运动适应,以响应奶流量的动态变化。

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q1 PHYSIOLOGY
Journal of applied physiology Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-08-19 DOI:10.1152/japplphysiol.00552.2025
Maressa E Kennedy, Elska B Kaczmarek, Ani E Smith, Emily C Volpe, Dylan J Anderson, Skyler M Wallace, Hannah E Shideler, Harlow I Smith, Thomas H Stroud, Christopher J Mayerl
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引用次数: 0

摘要

安全有效的婴儿喂养需要吮吸、吞咽和呼吸的精确协调,然而这种协调的中断影响了相当多的婴儿。改变感觉输入,如奶瓶乳头流动速度,用于解决婴儿协调性差的问题。然而,先前的研究经常比较不同饲料中使用的不同乳头,这引入了混淆变量并限制了对神经运动反应的了解。为了解决这个问题,我们使用仔猪作为验证的动物模型,使用定制的计算机控制乳头来评估单次喂养过程中流量动态变化的实时神经运动反应。我们收集了高速双平面透视、口内压和呼吸数据来评估运动学、生理学和协调模式。我们发现,当吸吮和呼吸速率保持稳定时,较高的流量会引起更大的舌、舌骨和甲状腺平移,更大的剂量和更低的口内压力。值得注意的是,吞咽速度的增加导致了吮吸-吞咽-呼吸协调的转变,吞咽在吮吸周期中发生得更早,每次呼吸的频率也更高。这些变化表明婴儿能够迅速调整他们的运动输出以适应不断变化的感觉条件。该研究表明,实时流量变化显著影响喂养机制和协调,强调了基于运动学习和神经运动康复原理的基于感觉的干预的潜力。了解婴儿如何动态适应感官变化提供了对喂养发展的重要见解,并为开发更有效的喂养障碍婴儿干预措施提供了框架。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Infant pigs demonstrate motor adaptation across multiple physiologic functions during feeding in response to dynamic changes in milk flow rate.

Safe and effective infant feeding requires precise coordination of sucking, swallowing, and breathing, yet disruptions in this coordination affect a significant number of infants. Altering sensory input, such as bottle nipple flow rate, is used to address poor coordination in infants. However, prior studies often compare different nipples used across different feeds, which introduces confounding variables and limits insight into neuromotor responses. To address this, we used infant pigs as a validated animal model to assess real-time neuromotor responses to dynamic changes in flow rate within a single feeding session using a custom, computer-controlled nipple. We collected high-speed biplanar videofluoroscopy, intraoral pressure, and respiratory data to evaluate kinematics, physiology, and coordination patterns. We found that while sucking and breathing rates remained stable, higher flow rates elicited greater tongue, hyoid, and thyroid translations, larger bolus sizes, and lower intraoral pressures. Notably, swallow rate increased, resulting in a shift to suck-swallow-breathe coordination, with swallows occurring earlier in the suck cycle and more frequently per breath. These changes suggest that infants rapidly adapt their motor output to changing sensory conditions. This study demonstrates that real-time flow variation significantly impacts feeding mechanics and coordination, highlighting the potential for sensory-based interventions rooted in motor learning and neuromotor rehabilitation principles. Understanding how infants dynamically adjust to sensory changes offers critical insights into feeding development and provides a framework for developing more effective interventions for infants with feeding disorders.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We developed a novel method to dynamically alter milk flow rate mid-feed in infant pigs to assess real-time neurophysiological responses. Unlike prior studies, our approach avoids confounding variables that would result from providing nipples of different flow rates during separate feeding sessions and reveals how motor output adapts to sensory input in real time, offering new insight into the neuromotor control underlying infant feeding.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
9.10%
发文量
296
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Applied Physiology publishes the highest quality original research and reviews that examine novel adaptive and integrative physiological mechanisms in humans and animals that advance the field. The journal encourages the submission of manuscripts that examine the acute and adaptive responses of various organs, tissues, cells and/or molecular pathways to environmental, physiological and/or pathophysiological stressors. As an applied physiology journal, topics of interest are not limited to a particular organ system. The journal, therefore, considers a wide array of integrative and translational research topics examining the mechanisms involved in disease processes and mitigation strategies, as well as the promotion of health and well-being throughout the lifespan. Priority is given to manuscripts that provide mechanistic insight deemed to exert an impact on the field.
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