1. Multifactorial motor behavior assessment for real-time evaluation of emerging therapeutics to treat neurologic impairments
- Author
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Tori Riccelli, Jodi L. Silvernail, Carlos A. Cuellar, Suelen Lucio Boschen, Igor Lavrov, Riazul Islam, Ben Felmlee, and Peter J. Grahn
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Spinal cord diseases ,lcsh:Medicine ,Electric Stimulation Therapy ,Motor Activity ,Serotonergic ,Open field ,Article ,Midbrain ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical Conditioning, Animal ,medicine ,Paralysis ,Animals ,Humans ,Treadmill ,lcsh:Science ,Spinal cord ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Motor control ,Disease Management ,Electric Stimulation ,Rats ,Electrophysiology ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,medicine.symptom ,Psychomotor Disorders ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Locomotion - Abstract
Integrating multiple assessment parameters of motor behavior is critical for understanding neural activity dynamics during motor control in both intact and dysfunctional nervous systems. Here, we described a novel approach (termed Multifactorial Behavioral Assessment (MfBA)) to integrate, in real-time, electrophysiological and biomechanical properties of rodent spinal sensorimotor network activity with behavioral aspects of motor task performance. Specifically, the MfBA simultaneously records limb kinematics, multi-directional forces and electrophysiological metrics, such as high-fidelity chronic intramuscular electromyography synchronized in time to spinal stimulation in order to characterize spinal cord functional motor evoked potentials (fMEPs). Additionally, we designed the MfBA to incorporate a body weight support system to allow bipedal and quadrupedal stepping on a treadmill and in an open field environment to assess function in rodent models of neurologic disorders that impact motor activity This novel approach was validated using, a neurologically intact cohort, a cohort with unilateral Parkinsonian motor deficits due to midbrain lesioning, and a cohort with complete hind limb paralysis due to T8 spinal cord transection. In the SCI cohort, lumbosacral epidural electrical stimulation (EES) was applied, with and without administration of the serotonergic agonist Quipazine, to enable hind limb motor functions following paralysis. The results presented herein demonstrate the MfBA is capable of integrating multiple metrics of motor activity in order to characterize relationships between EES inputs that modulate mono- and polysynaptic outputs from spinal circuitry which in turn, can be used to elucidate underlying electrophysiologic mechanisms of motor behavior by synchronizing these datasets to metrics of movement and behavior. These results also demonstrate that proposed MfBA is an effective tool to integrate biomechanical and electrophysiology metrics, synchronized to therapeutic inputs such as EES or pharmacology, during body weight supported treadmill or open field motor activities, to target a high range of variations in motor behavior as a result of neurological deficit at the different levels of CNS.
- Published
- 2019