Abstract
The effect of prolonged and repetitive cooling of the spinal cord on the sensitivity to the metabolic effect of exogenous noradrenaline and on the resistance to cold exposure was studied in the white male rat. The spinal cord of 10 animals was cooled for an average of 90 h per day 5 days per wk to a level that induced an increase in O2 uptake of almost 70%. O2 consumption was then measured at 30.degree. C before and 1 h after a s.c. injection of noradrenaline (0.4 mg/kg). Following the noradrenaline injection, the experimental animals increased O2 uptake by 71%, while the control ones increased it by only 33% (P < 0.01). During exposure to -20.degree. C, the experimental animals, despite their increased capacity for nonshivering thermogenesis, did not maintain rectal temperature longer than the control ones, showing that other factors also play a significant role in cold adaptation in the rat.