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Robot-assisted mechanical therapy attenuates stroke-induced limb skeletal muscle injury.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Sen, CK; Khanna, S; Harris, H; Stewart, R; Balch, M; Heigel, M; Teplitsky, S; Gnyawali, S; Rink, C
Published in: FASEB J
March 2017

The efficacy and optimization of poststroke physical therapy paradigms is challenged in part by a lack of objective tools available to researchers for systematic preclinical testing. This work represents a maiden effort to develop a robot-assisted mechanical therapy (RAMT) device to objectively address the significance of mechanical physiotherapy on poststroke outcomes. Wistar rats were subjected to right hemisphere middle-cerebral artery occlusion and reperfusion. After 24 h, rats were split into control (RAMT-) or RAMT+ groups (30 min daily RAMT over the stroke-affected gastrocnemius) and were followed up to poststroke d 14. RAMT+ increased perfusion 1.5-fold in stroke-affected gastrocnemius as compared to RAMT- controls. Furthermore, RAMT+ rats demonstrated improved poststroke track width (11% wider), stride length (21% longer), and travel distance (61% greater), as objectively measured using software-automated testing platforms. Stroke injury acutely increased myostatin (3-fold) and lowered brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression (0.6-fold) in the stroke-affected gastrocnemius, as compared to the contralateral one. RAMT attenuated the stroke-induced increase in myostatin and increased BDNF expression in skeletal muscle. Additional RAMT-sensitive myokine targets in skeletal muscle (IL-1ra and IP-10/CXCL10) were identified from a cytokine array. Taken together, outcomes suggest stroke acutely influences signal transduction in hindlimb skeletal muscle. Regimens based on mechanical therapy have the clear potential to protect hindlimb function from such adverse influence.-Sen, C. K., Khanna, S., Harris, H., Stewart, R., Balch, M., Heigel, M., Teplitsky, S., Gnyawali, S., Rink, C. Robot-assisted mechanical therapy attenuates stroke-induced limb skeletal muscle injury.

Duke Scholars

Published In

FASEB J

DOI

EISSN

1530-6860

Publication Date

March 2017

Volume

31

Issue

3

Start / End Page

927 / 936

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Stroke Rehabilitation
  • Robotics
  • Regional Blood Flow
  • Rats, Wistar
  • Rats
  • Physical Therapy Modalities
  • Myostatin
  • Muscle, Skeletal
  • Male
  • Hindlimb
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Sen, C. K., Khanna, S., Harris, H., Stewart, R., Balch, M., Heigel, M., … Rink, C. (2017). Robot-assisted mechanical therapy attenuates stroke-induced limb skeletal muscle injury. FASEB J, 31(3), 927–936. https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201600437R
Sen, Chandan K., Savita Khanna, Hallie Harris, Richard Stewart, Maria Balch, Mallory Heigel, Seth Teplitsky, Surya Gnyawali, and Cameron Rink. “Robot-assisted mechanical therapy attenuates stroke-induced limb skeletal muscle injury.FASEB J 31, no. 3 (March 2017): 927–36. https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201600437R.
Sen CK, Khanna S, Harris H, Stewart R, Balch M, Heigel M, et al. Robot-assisted mechanical therapy attenuates stroke-induced limb skeletal muscle injury. FASEB J. 2017 Mar;31(3):927–36.
Sen, Chandan K., et al. “Robot-assisted mechanical therapy attenuates stroke-induced limb skeletal muscle injury.FASEB J, vol. 31, no. 3, Mar. 2017, pp. 927–36. Pubmed, doi:10.1096/fj.201600437R.
Sen CK, Khanna S, Harris H, Stewart R, Balch M, Heigel M, Teplitsky S, Gnyawali S, Rink C. Robot-assisted mechanical therapy attenuates stroke-induced limb skeletal muscle injury. FASEB J. 2017 Mar;31(3):927–936.

Published In

FASEB J

DOI

EISSN

1530-6860

Publication Date

March 2017

Volume

31

Issue

3

Start / End Page

927 / 936

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Stroke Rehabilitation
  • Robotics
  • Regional Blood Flow
  • Rats, Wistar
  • Rats
  • Physical Therapy Modalities
  • Myostatin
  • Muscle, Skeletal
  • Male
  • Hindlimb