Although the tongue is not a vital organ in sustaining life, it may be a vital organ in sustaining the will to live in many people. As carcinoma of the tongue represents the majority of the 30,000 oral cavity cancers diagnosed per year in the United States, many patients face the potential consequen
Electromyographic characterization in an animal model of dystonia
β Scribed by Kunal Chaniary; Mark Baron; Ann Rice; Paul Wetzel; Steven Shapiro
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 336 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Kernicterus is known to produce damage to the auditory system and the basal ganglia in humans. Although the Gunn rat model of kernicterus has been extensively used to characterize the auditory features, this model has not been similarly utilized to systematically investigate the movement disorder. In the present study, spontaneously jaundiced (jj) 16 day old Gunn rat pups were treated with sulfadimethoxine to exacerbate bilirubin toxicity and compared to saline treated jjs and nonβjaundiced (Nj) littermates. Electromyographic (EMG) activity was recorded from antagonistic hip muscles in dystonic and in normal appearing rats. Raw EMG signals were decomposed using the Discrete Wavelet Transform based multiβresolution analysis and signal coefficients corresponding to the dominant EMG frequency band were chosen. Gunn rats exposed to sulfadimethoxine developed a stable clinical state characterized by prolonged abnormal axial and appendicular postures. Coherence plots of the separated signals coefficients revealed 4β7 Hz coβactivation in antagonistic muscles that was significantly more prominent in jj sulfa treated dystonic compared to normal rats. The EMG findings support the presence of dystonia in sulfadimethoxine exposed jj Gunn rats and suggest that these animals can serve as a valuable model for experimental investigations of dystonia. Β© 2008 Movement Disorder Society.
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