Abstract

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a lethal muscle disease caused by dystrophin deficiency. Patients gradually lose motor function, become wheelchair-bound, and die from respiratory and/or cardiac muscle failure. Dystrophin-null dogs have been used as a large animal model for DMD since 1988 and are considered an excellent bridge between rodent models and human patients. While numerous protocols have been published for studying muscle and heart physiology in mice, few such protocols exist for studying skeletal muscle contractility, heart function, and whole-body activity in dogs. Over the last 20 years, we have developed and adapted an array of assays to evaluate whole-body movement, gait, single muscle force, whole limb torque, cardiac electrophysiology, and hemodynamic function in normal and dystrophic dogs. In this chapter, we present detailed working protocols for these assays and lessons we learned during the development and use of these protocols.

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