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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Gait analysis for functional evaluation in a surgical hindlimb suspension model of muscle atrophy.

Journal:
The Journal of physiology
Year:
2026
Authors:
Xu, Yanping et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Surgery · United States

Abstract

Disuse-induced skeletal muscle atrophy, commonly resulting from bedrest, immobilisation or spaceflight, leads to rapid loss of muscle mass and impaired mobility. Although muscle mass and contractile force are standard assessments in experimental models, these measures often fail to capture neuromuscular co-ordination deficits essential for effective movement. To better characterise these deficits, we employed a mouse hindlimb suspension (HLS) model for 14 days to induce disuse atrophy, confirmed by reductions in muscle mass, fibre type remodelling and satellite cell depletion, all of which were only partially reversed after a 7-day reloading period. In vivo analysis showed that gastrocnemius contractile force was significantly reduced following HLS and recovered incompletely after reloading. To functionally assess mobility, we implemented a non-invasive treadmill-based gait analysis, which revealed domain-specific impairments across neural control/rhythm, neuromuscular co-ordination and stability/variability, which were only partially restored after reloading, whereas muscle strength-related metrics such as paw drag showed mild but consistent alterations. At the molecular level, we identified elevated expression of MG29, subcellular redistribution of MG53 and altered expression of neuromuscular function-related genes (e.g. Ninj1, Prkg1, Ryr1 and S100a1), suggesting that MG29 and MG53 may contribute to impaired muscle plasticity and synaptic remodelling. Overall, our findings demonstrate that gait analysis can enhance the functional assessment of muscle disuse and recovery, offering a translational tool to evaluate interventions targeting atrophy-related mobility decline. KEY POINTS: Hindlimb suspension induces muscle atrophy and contractile loss, but functional consequences are not fully captured by traditional measurements. Gait analysis provides a non-invasive framework to evaluate neuromuscular performance across four domains: muscle strength/size, neural control/rhythm, neuromuscular co-ordination and stability/variability. Hindlimb suspension caused domain-specific impairments in rhythm control, co-ordination and stability, which were only partially restored after reloading, whereas strength-related metrics such as paw drag showed mild but consistent alterations. Correlation analyses revealed parallel reductions in propulsion- and rhythm-related gait metrics alongside decreases in muscle fibre size and tetanic force, indicating a functional-structural linkage between gait output and muscle integrity. Functional impairment is associated with satellite cell loss, MG29 upregulation, MG53 redistribution and neuromuscular function-related gene alteration. These findings identify gait metrics as biomarkers that may serve as early, non-invasive indicators of muscle disuse and recovery, providing mechanistic insights and a new tool to evaluate interventions targeting atrophy-related mobility loss.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41703899/