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Can Physical Exercise Have a Protective Effect in an Animal Model of Sleep-related Movement Disorder?

Overview
Journal Brain Res
Specialty Neurology
Date 2016 Mar 1
PMID 26923163
Citations 2
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Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to determine whether physical exercise (PE) has a protective effect in an experimental animal model of sleep-related movement disorder (A11 dopaminergic nuclei lesions with 6-OHDA). Rats were divided into four groups (Control PE-CTRL/PE, SHAM/PE, A11 lesion/NPE, A11 lesion/PE). Two experiments were performed: (1) the rats underwent PE before (2 weeks) and after (4 weeks) the A11 lesion; and (2) the rats underwent PE only after (4 weeks) the A11 lesion. Electrode insertion surgery was performed and sleep analyses were conducted over a period of 24h (baseline and after PE) and analyzed in 6 blocks of 4h. The results demonstrated that the A11 lesion produced an increased percentage of wakefulness in the final block of the dark period (3-7am) and a significant enhancement of the number of limb movements (LM) throughout the day. Four weeks of PE was important for reducing the number of LMs in the A11 lesion group in the rats that performed PE before and after the A11 lesion. However, in the analysis of the protective effect of PE on LM, the results showed that the number of LMs was lower at baseline in the group that had performed 2 weeks of PE prior to the A11 lesion than in the group that had not previously performed PE. In conclusion, these findings consistently demonstrate that non-pharmacological manipulations had a beneficial effect on the symptoms of sleep-related movement disorder.

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Putative Animal Models of Restless Legs Syndrome: A Systematic Review and Evaluation of Their Face and Construct Validity.

Silvani A, Ghorayeb I, Manconi M, Li Y, Clemens S Neurotherapeutics. 2022; 20(1):154-178.

PMID: 36536233 PMC: 10119375. DOI: 10.1007/s13311-022-01334-4.


Exercise as a favorable non-pharmacologic treatment to Sleep-Related Movement Disorders: a review.

Franco B, Daubian-Nose P, De-Mello M, Esteves A Sleep Sci. 2019; 12(2):116-121.

PMID: 31879545 PMC: 6922544. DOI: 10.5935/1984-0063.20190064.