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-induced fever in young and old Long-Evans
rats
1 Department of Biological Sciences, 3 Department of Psychology, and 2 Program in Neuroscience, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716-2590
Aging is
associated with a blunted or absent fever response to naturally
occurring infections or to the peripheral administration of bacterial
products and proinflammatory cytokines, including interleukin-1
(IL-1
). Whether old rats also exhibit an attenuated fever response
when challenged with direct brain administration of IL-1
is unknown.
Here we investigated the fever response of young (3-5 mo) and old
(24-26 mo) Long-Evans rats to the intracerebroventricular microinfusion of IL-1
. Core body temperature was monitored by telemetry in freely moving rats. Intracerebroventricularly administered IL-1
induced comparable increases in body temperature in young and
old Long-Evans rats. In the two groups, IL-1
-induced fever was
similar both in latency to peak fever and maximal fever response, whether the cytokine was administered 2 h after lights on or just before lights off. These data show that old Long-Evans rats are not
defective in their capacity to develop a fever in response to brain
administration of IL-1
.
cytokine; intracerebroventricular; aging; core temperature; nervous system; immune system
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