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Publication : Instrumented swim test for quantifying motor impairment in rodents.

First Author  Hughes NC Year  2024
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  14
Issue  1 Pages  29270
PubMed ID  39587238 Mgi Jnum  J:359105
Mgi Id  MGI:7784703 Doi  10.1038/s41598-024-80344-y
Citation  Hughes NC, et al. (2024) Instrumented swim test for quantifying motor impairment in rodents. Sci Rep 14(1):29270
abstractText  Swim tests are highly effective for identifying vestibular deficits in rodents by offering significant vestibular motor challenges with reduced proprioceptive input, unlike rotarod and balance beam tests. Traditional swim tests rely on subjective assessments, limiting objective quantification and reproducibility. We present a novel instrumented swim test using a miniature motion sensor with a 3D accelerometer and 3D gyroscope affixed to the rodent's head. This setup robustly quantifies six-dimensional motion-three translational and three rotational axes-during swimming with high temporal resolution. We demonstrate the test's capabilities by comparing head movements of Gpr156(-/-) mutant mice, which have impaired otolith organ development, to their heterozygous littermates. Our results show axis-specific differences in head movement probability distribution functions and dynamics that identify mice with the Gpr156 mutation. Axis-specific power spectrum analyses reveal selective movement alterations within distinct frequency ranges. Additionally, our spherical visualization and 3D analysis quantifies swimming performance based on head vector distance from upright. We use this analysis to generate a single classifier metric-a weighted average of an animal's head deviation from upright during swimming. This metric effectively distinguishes animals with vestibular dysfunction from those with normal vestibular function. Overall, this instrumented swim test provides quantitative metrics for assessing performance and identifying subtle, axis- and frequency-specific deficits not captured by existing systems. This novel quantitative approach can enhance understanding of rodent sensorimotor function including enabling more selective and reproducible studies of vestibular-motor deficits.
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