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Department of Psychology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
Previous research in infant rats
suggested that brown adipose tissue (BAT), by providing warm blood to
the heart during moderate cold exposure, protects cardiac rate. This
protective role for BAT thermogenesis was examined further in the
present study. In experiment 1,
1-wk-old rats in a warm environment were pretreated with saline or
chlorisondamine (a ganglionic blocker), and then BAT thermogenesis was
stimulated by injection with the
3-agonist CL-316243. In
experiment 2, pups were pretreated
with chlorisondamine and injected with CL-316243, and after BAT
thermogenesis was stimulated the interscapular region of the pups was
cooled externally with a thermode. In both experiments, cardiac rate,
oxygen consumption, and physiological temperatures were monitored.
Activation of BAT thermogenesis substantially increased cardiac rate in
saline- and chlorisondamine-treated pups, and focal cooling of the
interscapular region was sufficient to lower cardiac rate. The results
of these studies support the hypothesis that BAT thermogenesis
contributes directly to the modulation of cardiac rate.
cardiovascular system; nonshivering thermogenesis; thermoregulation
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