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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Muscle activity in dogs during walking, trotting, and therapy

By McLean, Hannah et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2019·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Surface Electromyography of the Vastus Lateralis, Biceps Femoris, and Gluteus Medius in Dogs During Stance, Walking, Trotting, and Selected Therapeutic Exercises.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study looked at how different exercises affect muscle activity in healthy dogs. Researchers measured muscle activity in the biceps femoris, vastus lateralis, and gluteus medius while the dogs stood still, walked, trotted, and performed various exercises. They found that most exercises, especially dancing backwards and stepping over obstacles, significantly increased muscle activity compared to just standing still. This information can help veterinarians recommend specific exercises to strengthen and rehabilitate dogs after injuries or during conditioning.

People also search for: dog muscle strengthening exercises · how to help my dog recover from injury · exercises for dog rehabilitation

Abstract

The objective of the study reported here was to evaluate the muscle activity patterns of the vastus lateralis (VL), biceps femoris (BF), and gluteus medius (GM) during stance, walking, trotting, and selected therapeutic exercises in clinically sound, healthy dogs. Our hypothesis was that the muscle activity during all exercises would differ from muscle activity at the stance.Surface electromyography of the selected muscles was performed during stance, walking, trotting, elevation of forelimbs on a platform, elevation of forelimbs on a platform with hindlimbs on an inflatable balance device, stepping up onto and over an obstacle, standing on a wobble board, dancing backwards, and wearing a leg weight at the walk and the trot. The maximal and mean muscle amplitude (&#x3bc;V) reflecting activity during several motion cycles were compared among the exercises.Mean EMG amplitude of the BF was significantly higher in all exercises (< 0.05) in comparison to stance. Mean EMG amplitude of the VL was significantly higher (< 0.05) during walking, trotting, dancing backwards, stepping up and over an obstacle, and at a trot with a leg weight as compared to stance. Mean EMG amplitude of the GM was significantly higher (< 0.05) during trotting, at a walk and a trot with a leg weight, standing on a wobble board, stepping up and over an obstacle, and dancing backwards when compared to stance. Of the studied exercises, dancing backwards increased the mean EMG amplitude of the BF and GM to the largest degree. Stepping up and over an obstacle increased the mean EMG amplitude of the VL to the largest degree.Compared to stance, the majority of therapeutic exercises examined increased muscle activity to varying degrees in the BF, VL, and GM. Our results may help clinicians to choose specific exercises to target specific muscles during conditioning, strengthening and rehabilitation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31355214/