Mastication

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BACK TO CHEEKS - ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY

Introduction

Mastication is the process whereby food is broken down by mechanical digestion in the oral cavity. The cheeks and tongue function to position food over the teeth where grinding can occur.

Rumination allows food to undergo mastication more than once. Also called 'chewing the cud', it allows greater nutrients to be extracted and absorbed from the food particles.

Mastication requires correct muscle movements and jaw articulation.

Muscles of Mastication

The muscles of mastication are well developed.

Jaw Opening Muscles

  • Digastricus muscle
   -Origin: paracondylar process of occipital bone
   -Insertion: angle of mandible
   -Two bellies: caudal half from the second visceral arch innervated by facial nerve (CN VII)
                 cranial half from the first visceral arch innervated by the mandibular branch of the trigeminal (CN V3)
   

Jaw Closing Muscles

All jaw closing muscles derivie from the first visceral arch and are innervated by the mandibular branch of the trigeminal nerve (CN V3)

  • Masseter muscle
   -Origin: maxilliary region of skull and zygomatic arch
   -Insertion: wide area on caudal side of mandible
   -Several divisions
   -Unilateral and bilateral contraction
   -Also protrudes jaw
  • Lateral Pterygoid muscle
   -Origin: pterygopalatine region of skull
   -Insertion: lateral aspect of mandible
   -Also protrudes jaw (one-sided contraction)
  • Medial Pterygoid muscle
   -Origin: pterygopalatine region of skull
   -Insertion: medial aspect of mandible
   -One-sided contraction to close jaw
  • Temporal muscle
   -Origin: lateral surface of cranium
   -Insertion: coronoid process
   -Pulls mandible dorsally
   -Also pulls mandible rostrally (overbite) and caudally (underbite) 

Lateral Translation of Mandible

  • Masseter muscle
  • Contralateral medial and lateral pterygoids

Jaw Articulation

Species Differences

  • Large masseter and pterygoid muscles in the horse for extensive chewing
  • Large temporalis muscle in the carnivores for snapping the jaw shut, e.g. in lions and pitbull terriers
  • Herbiverous species have a limited digastricus muscle
  • Canids have a larger digasticus muscle than herbivores (but smaller in comparison with jaw closing muscles)