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Animal Models of Exercise From Rodents to Pythons.

Margaret H HastingsJonathan J HerreraJ Sawalla GusehBjarni AtlasonNicholas E HoustisAzrul Abdul KadirHaobo LiCedric SheffieldAnand Prakash SinghJason D RohSharlene M DayAnthony Rosenzweig
Published in: Circulation research (2022)
Acute and chronic animal models of exercise are commonly used in research. Acute exercise testing is used, often in combination with genetic, pharmacological, or other manipulations, to study the impact of these manipulations on the cardiovascular response to exercise and to detect impairments or improvements in cardiovascular function that may not be evident at rest. Chronic exercise conditioning models are used to study the cardiac phenotypic response to regular exercise training and as a platform for discovery of novel pathways mediating cardiovascular benefits conferred by exercise conditioning that could be exploited therapeutically. The cardiovascular benefits of exercise are well established, and, frequently, molecular manipulations that mimic the pathway changes induced by exercise recapitulate at least some of its benefits. This review discusses approaches for assessing cardiovascular function during an acute exercise challenge in rodents, as well as practical and conceptual considerations in the use of common rodent exercise conditioning models. The case for studying feeding in the Burmese python as a model for exercise-like physiological adaptation is also explored.
Keyphrases
  • high intensity
  • physical activity
  • resistance training
  • liver failure
  • heart failure
  • dna methylation
  • drug induced
  • skeletal muscle
  • small molecule