Body-temperature regulation in the normal and cold-acclimatized cat
- 1 July 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 18 (4), 772-777
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1963.18.4.772
Abstract
The role of the anterior hypothalamus as a temperature-sensible area serving a thermal regulatory input function for body-temperature control in cats living at 25 C (noncold acclimatized) or 5 C (cold acclimatized) was tested by selectively changing diencephalic temperatures in the unanesthetized animal resting at 23 C ambient temperature. Extremity and internal body-temperature and metabolic-rate responses were monitored during the induced thermal shifts. Both groups of animals showed greater peripheral vasomotor and internal body-temperature changes consequent to hypothalamic heating than cooling; no modification of these test patterns was noted as a function of whole-body cold acclimatization. The temperature-sensible anterior hypothalamic areas appear to be more influential in protecting against hyperthermia than hypothermia and their function in biothermal control does not appear to be altered by whole-body cold acclimatization. Submitted on November 1, 1962Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Thermoregulatory responses to hypothalamic cooling in unanesthetized dogsAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1960
- Die Wirkung unmittelbarer Erwärmung und Abkühlung der Wärmezentra auf die KörpertemperaturNaunyn-Schmiedebergs Archiv für experimentelle Pathologie und Pharmakologie, 1912