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Dive into the research topics where Anne Mishellany-Dutour is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Mishellany-Dutour.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2008

Is the goal of mastication reached in young dentates, aged dentates and aged denture wearers?

Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Johanne Renaud; Marie-Agnès Peyron; Frank Rimek; Alain Woda

The objective of the present study was to assess the impact of age and dentition status on masticatory function. A three-arm case-control study was performed. Group 1 (n 14) was composed of young fully dentate subjects (age 35.6 +/- 10.6 years), group 2 (n 14) of aged fully dentate subjects (age 68.8 +/- 7.0 years) and group 3 (n 14) of aged full denture wearers (age 68.1 +/- 7.2 years). Mastication adaptation was assessed in the course of chewing groundnuts and carrots to swallowing threshold. Particle size distribution of the chewed food, electromyographic (EMG) activity of the masseter and temporalis muscles during chewing, and resting and stimulated whole saliva rates were measured. Aged dentate subjects used significantly more chewing strokes to reach swallowing threshold than younger dentate subjects (P < 0.05), with increased particle size reduction, longer chewing sequence duration (P < 0.05) and greater total EMG activity (P < 0.05) for both groundnuts and carrots. In addition, aged denture wearers made significantly more chewing strokes than aged dentate subjects (P < 0.001) to reach swallowing threshold for groundnuts. Particle size reduction at time of swallowing was significantly poorer for denture wearers than for their aged dentate counterparts, despite an increase in chewing strokes, sequence duration and EMG activity per sequence. Masticatory function was thus adapted to ageing, but was impaired in denture wearers, who failed to adapt fully to their deficient masticatory apparatus.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2010

Development and validation of a mastication simulator

Alain Woda; Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Batier L; François O; Meunier Jp; Reynaud B; Alric M; Marie-Agnès Peyron

More and more research are being done on food bolus formation during mastication. However, the process of bolus formation in the mouth is difficult to observe. A mastication simulator, the Artificial Masticatory Advanced Machine (AM2) was developed to overcome this difficulty and is described here. Different variables can be set such as the number of masticatory cycles, the amplitude of the mechanical movements simulating the vertical and lateral movements of the human lower jaw, the masticatory force, the temperature of the mastication chamber and the injection and the composition of saliva. The median sizes of the particles collected from the food boluses made by the AM2 were compared with those of human boluses obtained with peanuts and carrots as test foods. Our results showed that AM2 mimicked human masticatory behavior, producing a food bolus with similar granulometric characteristics.


Journal of Dental Research | 2010

The Masticatory Normative Indicator

A. Woda; Emmanuel Nicolas; Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Martine Hennequin; Marie-Noëlle Mazille; J.L. Veyrune; Marie-Agnès Peyron

There is no established quantitative, objective method to differentiate individuals with good masticatory function from those lacking this attribute. The aim of this study was to specify a normal range of median particle size values for masticated raw carrots collected just before being swallowed. The masticatory normative indicator (MNI) value thus obtained was based on seven studies carried out by different investigators using different methods for measuring particle size in carrot boluses. A simple mathematical transformation of variables and the choice of an interval of ±1.96 times the standard deviation gave 4.0 mm as the upper limit of normal median particle size for carrots in a population of young persons with good oral health. This value identifies boluses that may be considered as resulting from impaired mastication, as illustrated in healthy individuals with experimentally hampered mastication, denture wearers, and individuals presenting with obesity or Down syndrome.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Retro-Nasal Aroma Release Is Correlated with Variations in the In-Mouth Air Cavity Volume after Empty Deglutition

Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Alain Woda; Hélène Labouré; Pierre Bourdiol; Pauline Lachaze; Elisabeth Guichard; Gilles Feron

We hypothesized that interindividual differences in motor activities during chewing and/or swallowing were determining factors for the transfer of volatile aroma from the in-mouth air cavity (IMAC) toward the olfactory mucosa. In our first experiment, we looked for changes in IMAC volume after saliva deglutition in 12 healthy subjects. The mean IMAC volume was measured after empty deglutition using an acoustic pharyngometer device. Based on the time course of the IMAC volume after swallowing, we discerned two groups of subjects. The first group displayed a small, constant IMAC volume (2.26 mL ±0.62) that corresponded to a high tongue position. The second group displayed a progressive increase in IMAC (from 6.82 mL ±2.37 to 22.82 mL ±3.04) that corresponded to a progressive lowering of the tongue to its resting position. In our second experiment, we investigated the relationship between IMAC volume changes after deglutition and the level of aroma release at the nostril. For this purpose, the release of menthone was measured at the nostril level in 25 subjects who consumed similar amounts of a mint tablet. The subjects were separated into two groups corresponding to two levels of menthone release: high (H) and low (L). The mean volume of IMAC was measured during and after empty deglutition. Group H displayed a small, constant amplitude of IMAC volume change after deglutition, while Group L displayed a progressive increase in IMAC. It is likely that Group H continuously released the aroma through the veloglossal isthmus as the mint was consumed, while Group L trapped the aroma in the oral cavity and then released it into the nasal cavity upon swallowing. These results show that the in vivo aroma release profile in humans depends closely on the different motor patterns at work during empty deglutition.


Journal of Oral Rehabilitation | 2010

Is the tongue position influenced by the palatal vault dimensions

Pierre Bourdiol; Anne Mishellany-Dutour; S. Abou-El-Karam; Emmanuel Nicolas; A. Woda

The influence of the palatal vault dimensions on tongue position is here studied through evaluation of the in-mouth air cavity (IMAC) volume when the mandible is in maximal intercuspal position. A sample of 35 women (mean age 21.2 +/- 1.0) and 15 men (mean age 22.1 +/- 0.9) was selected. The sagittal cross-section area of the IMAC, which is modulated by the tongue position, was measured on lateral cephalograms. Dental casts were used to measure the palatal vault volume, which was defined by the occlusal plane, the hard palate and the posterior face of the second molars. Palatal vault volume allowed deduction of the IMAC volume through a rule of three procedure relating volume to area ratios. No IMAC could be calculated from cephalograms of 10 subjects who had the tongue stuck to the palate. For the 40 other subjects, the IMAC volume was 8.9 +/- 4.8 mL. It was 2 mL larger in men (n = 14) than in women (n = 26) and was the largest in skeletal Class III and the smallest in skeletal Class II (P > 0.05). IMAC volume was strongly correlated with palatal vault height but neither with palatal width nor length. It was thus assumed that the height of the palatal vault could influence the most observed position of the tongue but this does not exclude a possible growth influence of the tongue on its surrounding skeletal structures.


Journal of Oral Rehabilitation | 2013

Mood-induced variations of mandible and tongue postures

Pierre Bourdiol; Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Marie-Agnès Peyron; Alain Woda

Twelve young adults in a good general health were observed during habitual posture of tongue and jaw in different emotional conditions induced by watching three video sequences. The position of the mandible was tracked by the displacements of an electromagnetic sensor glued to the chin. The tongue-to-palate distance was obtained by 2-D location of three electromagnetic sensors placed on the tongue upper midline surface. Head displacements were evaluated with a sensor fixed to an upper central incisor and were subtracted from corresponding displacements of tongue and chin sensors to obtain the real tongue and mandible positions during continuous recording sequences. Emotional conditioning by a fear movie influenced the vertical position of the mandible: the mean interarch distances during the fear movie (2·34 ± 0·24 mm) were significantly different from those measured during the tender (3·13 ± 0·35) and neutral (3·42 ± 0·80) movies, respectively (anova repeated measure, SNK; P < 0·05). anova repeated measure indicated that the tongue-to-palate distance differed significantly when the subjects were watching the conditioning movies (P = 0·003), the tip of the tongue taking a lower position during the fear movie than during the tender and neutral movies.


Food Quality and Preference | 2007

Particle size distribution in the food bolus after mastication of natural foods

Marie-Laure Jalabert-Malbos; Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Alain Woda; Marie-Agnès Peyron


Food Quality and Preference | 2011

Comparison of food boluses prepared in vivo and by the AM2 mastication simulator

Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Marie-Agnès Peyron; Jocelyn Croze; Olivier François; Christoph Hartmann; Monique Alric; Alain Woda


Tropical dental journal | 2012

Substantiation of an artificial saliva formulated for use in a masticatory apparatus.

Roger-Leroi; Anne Mishellany-Dutour; A. Woda; Marchand M; Marie-Agnès Peyron


Journal of Oral Rehabilitation | 2014

Tongue-mandible coupling movements during saliva swallowing

Pierre Bourdiol; Anne Mishellany-Dutour; Marie-Agnès Peyron; A. Woda

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Alain Woda

University of Auvergne

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A. Woda

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pierre Bourdiol

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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S. Abou-El-Karam

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sylvain Denis

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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