Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to establish a rat bipedal walking model to examine the effects of bipedal walking on the central nervous system by training rats to perform bipedal walking over a period of 3 months. The characteristics of bipedal walking were investigated using kinematic and electromyographic methods in established bipedal walking models. Stable bipedal walking was achieved in rats by training them to stand with an upright posture and to walk with the hindlimbs using bipedal-walking training equipment to obtain a water reward. A stable head position in the rat bipedal walking model was attained primarily by closing the swing-phase period with a large angular change in the hip, knee, and ankle joints. The EMG burst pattern of the knee extensor (m. rectus femoris) and the erector muscle of the spine (m. longissimus) during bipedal walking was similar to that during quadrupedal walking in rats. We established two bipedal walking models using normal and forelimb-amputated rats. Comparative studies of these two bipedal walking models are expected to provide the information about the influence of forelimb movements on neuronal control of bipedal walking.

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