Addition of angled rungs to the horizontal ladder walking task for more sensitive probing of sensorimotor changes
Autor: | Kathleen M Keefe, Mollie Senior, Morgan M. Rollins, Thomas J. Campion, George M. Smith, Kaitlyn M. Rauscher, Jaclyn T. Eisdorfer, Andrew J. Spence, Gabrielle Gordon, Michael A. Phelan, Hannah Sobotka-Briner |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Critical Care and Emergency Medicine
Physiology Video Recording Social Sciences Walking Hindlimb Task (project management) Rats Sprague-Dawley Intraperitoneal Injections Medicine and Health Sciences Psychology Medicine Spinal Cord Injury Spinal cord injury Trauma Medicine Routes of Administration Multidisciplinary Peripheral Neurology Optical Equipment Engineering and Technology External manipulation Sensory Perception Female Anatomy Gait Analysis Traumatic Injury Research Article medicine.medical_specialty Science Equipment Transfection Research and Analysis Methods Physical medicine and rehabilitation Animals Contralateral limb Molecular Biology Techniques Molecular Biology Gait Disorders Neurologic Pharmacology Biological Locomotion business.industry Lasers Cognitive Psychology Biology and Life Sciences medicine.disease Gait Rats Body Limbs Gait analysis Cognitive Science Perception business Neurotrauma Neuroscience |
Zdroj: | PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 2, p e0246298 (2021) PLoS ONE |
ISSN: | 1932-6203 |
Popis: | One method for the evaluation of sensorimotor therapeutic interventions, the horizontal ladder walking task, analyzes locomotor changes that may occur after disease, injury, or by external manipulation. Although this task is well suited for detection of large effects, it may overlook smaller changes. The inability to detect small effect sizes may be due to a neural compensatory mechanism known as “cross limb transfer”, or the contribution of the contralateral limb to estimate an injured or perturbed limb’s position. The robust transfer of compensation from the contralateral limb may obscure subtle locomotor outcomes that are evoked by clinically relevant therapies, in the early onset of disease, or between higher levels of recovery. Here, we propose angled rungs as a novel modification to the horizontal ladder walking task. Easily-adjustable angled rungs force rats to locomote across a different locomotion path for each hindlimb and may therefore make information from the contralateral limb less useful. Using hM3Dq (excitatory) Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs) expressed in large diameter peripheral afferents of the hindlimb in the intact animal, we characterized the sensitivity of our design to detect stepping differences by comparing locomotor changes observed on angled rungs to those observed on a standard horizontal ladder. On our novel asymmetrical ladder, activation of DREADDs resulted in significant differences in rung misses (p = 0.000011) and weight-supporting events (p = 0.049). By comparison, on a standard ladder, we did not observe differences in these parameters (p = 0.86 and p = 0.98, respectively). Additionally, no locomotor differences were detected in baseline and inactivated DREADDs trials when we compared ladder types, suggesting that the angled rungs do not change animal gait behavior unless intervention or injury is introduced. Significant changes observed with angled rungs may demonstrate more sensitive probing of locomotor changes due to the decoupling of cross limb transfer. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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