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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Electrical impedance myography normal values and age effects

By Verga, Sarah A et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Department of Neurology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Electrical impedance myography in healthy dogs: Normative values, repeatability, and the impact of age.

Species:
dog
Stomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A study looked at 73 healthy dogs of various breeds and ages to see how a new test called electrical impedance myography (EIM) could help assess muscle health. This test uses a weak electrical current to measure muscle condition and can be done easily on awake dogs. The researchers found that as dogs age, their muscle health tends to decline, with noticeable changes starting around 0.5 degrees per year, especially in older dogs. The test showed good repeatability, meaning it can reliably measure muscle health over time. This method could be useful for monitoring muscle health in aging dogs.

People also search for: dog muscle health test · electrical impedance myography for dogs · aging dog muscle condition

Abstract

Convenient tools to assess canine skeletal muscle health would be useful for a variety of applications, including standard veterinary assessments of dog fitness, as well as studies of muscle deterioration due to age or disease. One technology that can be applied conveniently to awake dogs with minimal restraint is electrical impedance myography (EIM). In EIM, a weak electrical current is appliedsurface electrodes to a muscle of interest and consequent impedance characteristics of the muscle are obtained, providing insight into muscle condition and composition. In this study, we assessed a total of 73 dogs (42 males and 31 females), of varied neutering status and breed, ages 0.6 to 13.5 years. We identified age-dependent reference values for the 100 kHz phase value in three pelvic limb muscles, caudal sartorius, cranial tibial, and gastrocnemius. While phase values were generally higher in males than females, the difference did not reach significance. In general, values declined on average with age at about 0.5 degrees/year, but with the decline being most substantial in the oldest dogs. Limited reproducibility assessment of the technique suggested good repeatability with variation in values between measurements being under 5%. These results show that EIM has the potential for the assessment of canine muscle health and may find value in aging muscle research.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36619959/