Robotic Rehabilitator of the Rodent Upper Extremity: A System and Method for Assessing and Training Forelimb Force Production after Neurological Injury
前肢
脊髓损伤
后肢
医学
物理医学与康复
脊髓
解剖
精神科
作者
Kelli Sharp,Jaime E. Duarte,Berkenesh Gebrekristos,Sergi Perez,Oswald Steward,David J. Reinkensmeyer
Rodent models of spinal cord injury are critical for the development of treatments for upper limb motor impairment in humans, but there are few methods for measuring forelimb strength of rodents, an important outcome measure.We developed a novel robotic device-the Robotic Rehabilitator of the Rodent Upper Extremity (RUE)-that requires rats to voluntarily reach for and pull a bar to retrieve a food reward; the resistance of the bar can be programmed.We used RUE to train forelimb strength of 16 rats three times per week for 23 weeks before and 38 weeks after a mild (100 kdyne) unilateral contusion at the cervical level 5 (C5).We measured maximum force produced when RUE movement was unexpectedly blocked.We compared this blocked pulling force (BPF) to weekly measures of forelimb strength obtained with a previous, well-established method: the grip strength meter (GSM).Before injury, BPF was 2.6 times higher (BPF, 444.6 -19.1 g; GSM, 168.4 -3.1 g) and 4.9 times more variable ( p < 0.001) than pulling force measured with the GSM; the two measurement methods were uncorrelated (R 2 = 0.03; p = 0.84).After injury, there was a significant decrease in BPF of 134.35 g -14.71 g ( p < 0.001).Together, our findings document BPF as a repeatable measure of forelimb force production, sensitive to a mild spinal cord injury, which comes closer to measuring maximum force than the GSM and thus may provide a useful measure for quantifying the effects of treatment in rodent models of SCI.