نتایج جستجو برای: running wheel exercise

تعداد نتایج: 261182  

2010
Mélisa Veillette Julie Guitard Stéphan G. Reebs

Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) run extensively in exercise wheels. This running may cause paw lesions. Three treatments of these wounds (topical application of vitamin E, wheel blocking, and a combination of both) were compared using both sexes. A pretreatment period with or without wheels lasted 15 days and the ensuing treatment period lasted 45 days. At the end of the pre-treatment pe...

Journal: :Journal of experimental zoology. Part B, Molecular and developmental evolution 2012
David J Green Brian G Richmond Sara L Miran

Mechanical loads play a significant role in determining long bone shape and strength, but less work has explored how these loads influence flat bones like the scapula, which has been shown to vary with locomotor preference among primate taxa. Here, we tested the effects of voluntary running and climbing exercise in mice to examine how the mechanical loads borne from different locomotor patterns...

Journal: :Journal of neuroendocrinology 2006
S K Droste M C Schweizer S Ulbricht J M H M Reul

We investigated whether voluntary exercise and concurrent antidepressant treatment (tianeptine; 20 mg/kg/day; 4 weeks) exert synergistic effects on the mouse hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis. Animals had access to a running wheel, were treated with the antidepressant, or received both conditions combined. Control mice received no running wheel and no drug treatment. Exercise res...

2017
Anton van Dellen Patricia M Cordery Tara L Spires Colin Blakemore Anthony J Hannan

Background: Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder predominantly affecting the cerebral cortex and striatum. Transgenic mice (R6/1 line), expressing a CAG repeat encoding an expanded polyglutamine tract in the N-terminus of the huntingtin protein, closely model HD. We have previously shown that environmental enrichment of these HD mice delays the onset of motor deficits. Furt...

2012
Nobue Kitanaka Junichi Kitanaka Kaname Watabe hitoshi Kubo hitoshi Takahashi Motohiko Takemura

The effect of exposure of male mice to a horizontal running wheel (Fast-TracTM) on conditioned place preference (CPP) and hyperlocomotion induced by methamphetamine (METH) was determined. In the first experiment eleven-week-old male ICR mice were divided into three groups and exposed to three different environments (housed individually with (group A) or without a running wheel (group B), or hou...

2014
Trevor Archer Danilo Garcia Anders Fredriksson

1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) induces permanent neurochemical and functional deficits. Following the administration of either two or four injections of the dopamine neurotoxin, MPTP, at a dose of 40 mg/kg, C57/BL6 mice were given access to running-wheels (30-min sessions, four times/week, Monday-Thursday) and treatment with the treated yeast, Milmed(®) (four times/week, Mo...

Abbas A. Vafaei Ali Rashidy-Pour Bizhan Sadighi-Moghaddam Hossein Miladi-Gorji, Manouchehr Safari Maziar M Akhavan Mitra Emami-Abarghoie

  Objective(s): The effect of maternal voluntary exercise on hippocampal BDNF level in rat offspring was studied. In addition, the possible role of hippocampal BDNF receptors in maternal exercise induced enhancement of learning in the rat pups was investigated.   Materials and Methods: Pregnant rats have been randomly assigned to sedentary control or voluntary exercise groups. Each of the exerc...

Journal: :Experimental neurology 2010
Sarah Dubreucq Muriel Koehl Djoher N Abrous Giovanni Marsicano Francis Chaouloff

Chronic voluntary wheel-running activity has been reported to hypersensitise central CB1 receptors in mice. On the other hand, pharmacological findings suggest that the CB1 receptor could be involved in wheel-running behaviour and in running-induced neurogenesis in the hippocampus. We analysed wheel-running behaviour for 6 weeks and measured its consequences on hippocampal neurogenesis in CB1 k...

Journal: :Muscle & nerve 2014
Bradley S Gordon Dawn A Lowe Matthew C Kostek

INTRODUCTION Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a lethal genetic disease caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene resulting in chronic muscle damage, muscle wasting, and premature death. Utrophin is a dystrophin protein homologue that increases dystrophic muscle function and reduces pathology. Currently, no treatments that increase utrophin protein expression exist. However, exercise increa...

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