Noninvasive measures of limb muscle strength are quite useful in preclinical translational studies that use mouse models of muscle disease, peripheral nerve disease, and movement disorders. The present study uses a simple protocol for assessing both inter-trial and inter-examiner reliability for two noninvasive methods of assessing limb strength in dystrophic (mdx) and wild type mice. One method, termed the whole body tension (WBT) method or escape test, measures the total phasic pulling tension exerted by the fore- and hindlimbs while a mouse attempts to escape into a darkened tube.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe whole body tension (WBT) method was used to evaluate the hypothesis that long term treatment with NF-kappaB inhibitors improves the total forward pulling tension exerted by the limb musculature of the mdx mouse. Mdx mice exhibited significantly reduced WBT values and more profound weakening during the course of generating multiple forward pulling movements than age-matched nondystrophic mice. Long term treatment with the NF-kappaB inhibitor pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC) did not significantly reduce nuclear p65 activation in the costal diaphragm, but increased WBT by 12% in mature (12 month) mice.
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