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Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The motility of the smooth muscle of the rumen and the reticulum is tightly synchronized since they are responsible for degrading the ingested fibrous diet. It involves mixing contractions of partially digested material (cycle A), cyclic eructation of fermented gases (cycle B), and c...

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Autores principales: Wierzbicka, Małgorzata, Domino, Małgorzata, Zabielski, Romuald, Gajewski, Zdzisław
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8068381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33917991
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11041052
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author Wierzbicka, Małgorzata
Domino, Małgorzata
Zabielski, Romuald
Gajewski, Zdzisław
author_facet Wierzbicka, Małgorzata
Domino, Małgorzata
Zabielski, Romuald
Gajewski, Zdzisław
author_sort Wierzbicka, Małgorzata
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The motility of the smooth muscle of the rumen and the reticulum is tightly synchronized since they are responsible for degrading the ingested fibrous diet. It involves mixing contractions of partially digested material (cycle A), cyclic eructation of fermented gases (cycle B), and contractions associated with regurgitation and rumination (cycle C). Disorders of cycles A, B, and C in reticulo-rumen contraction occurred in cases of many metabolic diseases. Since the smooth muscle electromyography (EMG) is closely associated with the motility pattern, our study aimed to implement the long-term EMG telemetry recording method to analyze the basic reticulo-rumen motility pattern in conscious unrestrained sheep. The study was conducted on nine ewes chronically fitted with bipolar electrodes in the rumen and reticulum. Cycles A and B occurred constantly in a similar share, whereas cycles C appeared every 30 min and lasted for the most part 15–30 min. EMG signal analysis showed more differences at the level of single bursts than on burst bundles. Recording reticulo-rumen EMG signal with a long-term telemetry approach offers a reliable tool to assess the forestomach motility in conscious, unrestrained sheep, allowing for easy recognition of reticulo-rumen cycles. ABSTRACT: The reticulum and rumen are considered a single functional unit (the reticulo-rumen) with regards to myoelectrical and contractile activities. The specialized contractions of the reticulo-rumen provide constant mixing of partially digested material (cycle A), its flow into the omasum during eructation (cycle B), and regurgitation-rumination (cycle C). This study aimed to investigate the feasibility of electromyography (EMG) registered by a long-term telemetry method for assessment of the basic reticulo-rumen myoelectrical activity in sheep, to develop the effective recognition of the reticulo-rumen cycles at rest with no food stimulation, and to investigate the relationship between cycles A, B, and C in such basic conditions. The experiment was carried out on nine ewes. Myoelectric activity of the rumen, reticulum, and abomasum was recorded by the combination of three silver bipolar electrodes and a 3-channel transmitter implant. The myoelectrical activity registered successfully in the reticulum and rumen was determined as three characteristic patterns of cycles A, B, and C. The percentage of each type of cycle changed at different intervals from equally cycles A (43–50%) and B (50–56%), occurring when cycle C was not observed to the domination of cycle C (57–73%) with a decrease of cycles A (6–14%) and B (20–28%). The long-term EMG telemetry registration is feasible in the assessment of the reticulo-rumen myoelectrical activity in sheep.
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spelling pubmed-80683812021-04-25 Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method Wierzbicka, Małgorzata Domino, Małgorzata Zabielski, Romuald Gajewski, Zdzisław Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The motility of the smooth muscle of the rumen and the reticulum is tightly synchronized since they are responsible for degrading the ingested fibrous diet. It involves mixing contractions of partially digested material (cycle A), cyclic eructation of fermented gases (cycle B), and contractions associated with regurgitation and rumination (cycle C). Disorders of cycles A, B, and C in reticulo-rumen contraction occurred in cases of many metabolic diseases. Since the smooth muscle electromyography (EMG) is closely associated with the motility pattern, our study aimed to implement the long-term EMG telemetry recording method to analyze the basic reticulo-rumen motility pattern in conscious unrestrained sheep. The study was conducted on nine ewes chronically fitted with bipolar electrodes in the rumen and reticulum. Cycles A and B occurred constantly in a similar share, whereas cycles C appeared every 30 min and lasted for the most part 15–30 min. EMG signal analysis showed more differences at the level of single bursts than on burst bundles. Recording reticulo-rumen EMG signal with a long-term telemetry approach offers a reliable tool to assess the forestomach motility in conscious, unrestrained sheep, allowing for easy recognition of reticulo-rumen cycles. ABSTRACT: The reticulum and rumen are considered a single functional unit (the reticulo-rumen) with regards to myoelectrical and contractile activities. The specialized contractions of the reticulo-rumen provide constant mixing of partially digested material (cycle A), its flow into the omasum during eructation (cycle B), and regurgitation-rumination (cycle C). This study aimed to investigate the feasibility of electromyography (EMG) registered by a long-term telemetry method for assessment of the basic reticulo-rumen myoelectrical activity in sheep, to develop the effective recognition of the reticulo-rumen cycles at rest with no food stimulation, and to investigate the relationship between cycles A, B, and C in such basic conditions. The experiment was carried out on nine ewes. Myoelectric activity of the rumen, reticulum, and abomasum was recorded by the combination of three silver bipolar electrodes and a 3-channel transmitter implant. The myoelectrical activity registered successfully in the reticulum and rumen was determined as three characteristic patterns of cycles A, B, and C. The percentage of each type of cycle changed at different intervals from equally cycles A (43–50%) and B (50–56%), occurring when cycle C was not observed to the domination of cycle C (57–73%) with a decrease of cycles A (6–14%) and B (20–28%). The long-term EMG telemetry registration is feasible in the assessment of the reticulo-rumen myoelectrical activity in sheep. MDPI 2021-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8068381/ /pubmed/33917991 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11041052 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wierzbicka, Małgorzata
Domino, Małgorzata
Zabielski, Romuald
Gajewski, Zdzisław
Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method
title Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method
title_full Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method
title_fullStr Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method
title_full_unstemmed Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method
title_short Long-Term Recording of Reticulo-Rumen Myoelectrical Activity in Sheep by a Telemetry Method
title_sort long-term recording of reticulo-rumen myoelectrical activity in sheep by a telemetry method
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8068381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33917991
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11041052
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