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Assessing Gait by Footprint Analysis: A Method to Test Motor Coordination in Mice


Transcript


When all of the mice have been tested, place a 9.9 by 42 centimeter piece of white paper onto the lab bench and place a dark goal box at the distal end of the paper. Place other boxes approximately the same length as the paper on both sides of the runway to prevent escape and add black and red ink to separate 35-millimeter Petri dishes. To train the mice for the analysis, place a mouse at the proximal end of the paper facing the goal box and let the mouse walk from the proximal end of the paper to the goal box.

When the mouse reaches the box, gently scruff the animal tucking the back and tail between the ball of the thumb and the other fingers to limit the movement of the hindlimbs and immerse the bottoms of the forelimbs in red ink and the bottom of the hindlimbs in black ink. Then, immediately place the mouse back onto the proximal end of the paper facing the goal box and let the mouse walk from the proximal end to the goal box. After air drying the foot-printed paper, use a ruler to obtain three measurements of the stride length by measuring the distances between the same parts of the paw prints.

Of the front base width, by drawing a line between consecutive same side front footprints and measuring the length of the vertical line from the pad of the front footprint to the line drawn between the footprints, and of the hind base width, by drawing a line between consecutive right hind footprints and measuring the length of the vertical line from the pad of the left hind footprint to the line drawn between the other right footprints. For overlap, measure the distance between the pads of the front and hind footprints.

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