HUNGER AND APPETITE 



507 



When the contractions are comparatively feeble, the length of the period during 

 which they occur is about twelve minutes. When the contractions are powerful, the 

 periods are always initiated by weaker contractions with long intervening pauses; 

 finally the pauses disappear and the contractions become more and more pronounced 

 until, as above mentioned, a virtual tetanus lasting from two to five minutes, may 

 supervene. The duration of the entire hunger period varies from one-half to one 

 and a half hours, with an average of from thirty to forty-five minutes, and the num- 

 ber of individual contractions in a period varies from twenty to seventy. Between the 

 hunger periods, intervals of from one-half to two and one-half hours of quiescence 

 may supervene. (See Fig. 168.) 



Similar contractions, often passing into incomplete tetanus, have been 

 observed in the stomach of healthy infants, some of the observations hav- 

 ing been made before the first nursing. The intervals of motor quies- 

 cence between the hunger periods are shorter than in adults. In obser- 



Fig. 166. -Diagram of method for recording stomach movements. B. rubber balloon in stomach. 

 D, kymograph. F, cork float with recording flag. M, manometer. L, manometer fluid (bromo- 

 form, chloroform, or water). R, rubber tube connecting balloon with manometer. S, stomach. 

 T, side tube for inflation of stomach balloon. (From Carlson.) 



vations made during sleep, it was observed that, when the contractions 

 were very vigorous, the infant would show signs of restlessness and 

 might awake and cry. As in the adult, the contractions are evidently 

 associated with subjective sensations of hunger. Contractions of the 

 empty stomach have also been recorded on a large variety of animals, 

 including the dog, rabbit, cat, guinea pig, bird, frog and turtle. They 

 vary somewhat in type in different animals. 



With regard to the time of onset of the tonus and hunger contractions, 

 it has been observed that the only period during which the fundus is 

 free of them is immediately after a large meal. After a moderate meal 

 the tonus rhythm begins to appear in about thirty minutes. It gradually 

 increases in intensity, until by the time the stomach has nearly emptied 



