Characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation

Hindlimb unloading is a widely used model for studying the effects of microgravity on a skeleton. Hindlimb unloading produces a marked loss in bone due to increased osteoclast activity. Electrical muscle stimulation is being investigated as a simulated resistive exercise countermeasure to attenuate...

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Main Author: Vyvial, Brent Aron
Other Authors: Bloomfield, Susan A.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5760
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-57602013-01-08T10:38:45ZCharacterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulationVyvial, Brent Aronbonebiomechanicsspaceaging male ratsHindlimb unloading is a widely used model for studying the effects of microgravity on a skeleton. Hindlimb unloading produces a marked loss in bone due to increased osteoclast activity. Electrical muscle stimulation is being investigated as a simulated resistive exercise countermeasure to attenuate this bone loss. I sought to determine the relationship between strain measured at the antero-medial aspect of the proximal diaphysis of tibia and plantar-flexor torque measured at the ankle during electrical muscle stimulation as an exercise countermeasure for hindlimb unloading in rats. A mathematical relationship between strain and torque was established for the exercise during a 28 day period of hindlimb unloading. The strain generated during the exercise protocol is sufficient to attenuate bone loss caused by hindlimb unloading. Twelve six-month old Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted with uni-axial strain gages in vivo on the antero-medial aspect of the proximal diaphysis of the left tibia. Strain and torque were measured during electrical muscle stimulation for three time points during hindlimb unloading (Day 0 (n=3), Day 7 (n=3), Day 21 (n=3)). Peak strain decreased from 1,100 strain at the beginning of the study to 660 strain after 21 days of hindlimb unloading and muscle stimulation. The peak strain rate measured during muscle stimulation was 10,350 strain/second at the beginning and decreased to 6,670 strain/second after 21 days. The changes in strain are not significant, but the underlying trend in strain values may indicate an increase in bone formation due to the electrical muscle stimulation countermeasure. A mathematical model that relates measured strain to peak eccentric torque during muscle stimulation was created to facilitate estimation of strain for future studies of electrical muscle stimulation during hindlimb unloading.Texas A&M UniversityBloomfield, Susan A.Hogan, Harry A.2007-09-17T19:31:40Z2007-09-17T19:31:40Z2003-052007-09-17T19:31:40ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext1684438 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5760en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic bone
biomechanics
space
aging male rats
spellingShingle bone
biomechanics
space
aging male rats
Vyvial, Brent Aron
Characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation
description Hindlimb unloading is a widely used model for studying the effects of microgravity on a skeleton. Hindlimb unloading produces a marked loss in bone due to increased osteoclast activity. Electrical muscle stimulation is being investigated as a simulated resistive exercise countermeasure to attenuate this bone loss. I sought to determine the relationship between strain measured at the antero-medial aspect of the proximal diaphysis of tibia and plantar-flexor torque measured at the ankle during electrical muscle stimulation as an exercise countermeasure for hindlimb unloading in rats. A mathematical relationship between strain and torque was established for the exercise during a 28 day period of hindlimb unloading. The strain generated during the exercise protocol is sufficient to attenuate bone loss caused by hindlimb unloading. Twelve six-month old Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted with uni-axial strain gages in vivo on the antero-medial aspect of the proximal diaphysis of the left tibia. Strain and torque were measured during electrical muscle stimulation for three time points during hindlimb unloading (Day 0 (n=3), Day 7 (n=3), Day 21 (n=3)). Peak strain decreased from 1,100 strain at the beginning of the study to 660 strain after 21 days of hindlimb unloading and muscle stimulation. The peak strain rate measured during muscle stimulation was 10,350 strain/second at the beginning and decreased to 6,670 strain/second after 21 days. The changes in strain are not significant, but the underlying trend in strain values may indicate an increase in bone formation due to the electrical muscle stimulation countermeasure. A mathematical model that relates measured strain to peak eccentric torque during muscle stimulation was created to facilitate estimation of strain for future studies of electrical muscle stimulation during hindlimb unloading.
author2 Bloomfield, Susan A.
author_facet Bloomfield, Susan A.
Vyvial, Brent Aron
author Vyvial, Brent Aron
author_sort Vyvial, Brent Aron
title Characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation
title_short Characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation
title_full Characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation
title_fullStr Characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation
title_sort characterizing strain in the proximal rat tibia during electrical muscle stimulation
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5760
work_keys_str_mv AT vyvialbrentaron characterizingstrainintheproximalrattibiaduringelectricalmusclestimulation
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