Chen Yining, Poole Meredith C, Olesovsky Shelby V, Champagne Allen A, Harrison Kathleen A, Nashed Joseph Y, Coverdale Nicole S, Scott Stephen H, Cook Douglas J
Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, Kingston General Hospital, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Transl Stroke Res. 2021 Aug;12(4):569-580. doi: 10.1007/s12975-020-00859-0. Epub 2021 Jan 3.
Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide and survivors are frequently left with long-term disabilities that diminish their autonomy and result in the need for chronic care. There is an urgent need for the development of therapies that improve stroke recovery, as well as accurate and quantitative tools to measure function. Nonhuman primates closely resemble humans in neuroanatomy and upper limb function and may be crucial in randomized pre-clinical trials for testing the efficacy of stroke therapies. To test the feasibility of robotic assessment of motor function in a NHP model of stroke, two cynomolgus macaques were trained to perform a visually guided reaching task and were also assessed in a passive stretch task using the Kinarm robot. Strokes were then induced in these animals by transiently occluding the middle cerebral artery, and their motor performance on the same tasks was assessed after recovery. Relative to pre-stroke performance, post-stroke hand movements of the affected limb became slower and less accurate. Regression analyses revealed both recovered and compensatory movements to complete movements in different spatial directions. Lastly, we noted decreased range of motion in the elbow joint of the affected limb post-stroke associated with spasticity during passive stretch. Taken together, these studies highlight that sensorimotor deficits in reaching movements following stroke in cynomolgus macaques resemble those in human patients and validate the use of robotic assessment tools in a nonhuman primate model of stroke for identifying and characterizing such deficits.
中风是全球死亡和残疾的主要原因,幸存者常常会留下长期残疾,这削弱了他们的自主性,导致需要长期护理。迫切需要开发能够改善中风恢复的疗法,以及用于测量功能的准确且定量的工具。非人灵长类动物在神经解剖学和上肢功能方面与人类极为相似,在测试中风疗法疗效的随机临床前试验中可能至关重要。为了测试在非人灵长类中风模型中对运动功能进行机器人评估的可行性,对两只食蟹猴进行训练,使其执行视觉引导的伸手任务,并使用Kinarm机器人在被动伸展任务中对它们进行评估。然后通过短暂阻断大脑中动脉在这些动物中诱发中风,并在恢复后评估它们在相同任务上的运动表现。相对于中风前的表现,中风后受影响肢体的手部运动变得更慢且准确性更低。回归分析揭示了在不同空间方向上完成运动时的恢复性运动和代偿性运动。最后,我们注意到中风后受影响肢体的肘关节活动范围减小,这与被动伸展期间的痉挛有关。综上所述,这些研究表明,食蟹猴中风后伸手运动中的感觉运动缺陷与人类患者相似,并验证了在非人灵长类中风模型中使用机器人评估工具来识别和表征此类缺陷的可行性。