Five muscle fibre types (I, IIc, IIa, IIx and IIb) were found in the suprahyoid muscles (mylohyoid,
geniohyoid, and the anterior and posterior bellies of the digastric) of the rat using immuno and enzyme
histochemical techniques. More than 90% of fibres in the muscles examined were fast contracting fibres
(types IIa, IIx and IIb). The geniohyoid and the anterior belly of the digastric had the greatest number of
IIb fibres, whilst the mylohyoid was almost exclusively formed by aerobic fibres. The posterior belly of the
digastric contained a greater percentage of aerobic fibres (83.4%) than the anterior belly (67.8%). With the
exception of the geniohyoid, the percentage of type I and IIc fibres, which have slow myosin heavy chain
(MHCβ), was relatively high and greater than has been previously reported in the jaw-closing muscles of the
rat, such as the superficial masseter. The geniohyoid and mylohyoid exhibited a mosaic fibre type
distribution, without any apparent regionalisation, although in the later MHCβ-containing fibres (types I
and IIc) were primarily located in the rostral 2/3 region. In contrast, the anterior and posterior bellies of the
digastric revealed a clear regionalisation. In the anterior belly of the digastric 2 regions were observed: both
a central region, which was almost exclusively formed by aerobic fibres and where all of the type I and IIc
fibres were located, and a peripheral region, where type IIb fibres predominated. The posterior belly of the
digastric showed a deep aerobic region which was greater in size and where type I and IIc fibres were
confined, and a superficial region, where primarily type IIx and IIb fibres were observed.