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1 Department of Biomedical Sciences, Baylor College of Dentistry, Texas A & M University System Health Science Center, Dallas, Texas 75246; and 2 Veterans Affairs Western New York Healthcare System, Departments of Medicine, Orthopedics, and Physical Therapy, Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York 14215
Previous findings show that rats with
electrolytic or excitotoxic lesions in the dorsomedial hypothalamic
nucleus (DMN) are hypophagic and hypodipsic and have reduced ponderal
and linear growth but normal body composition. DMN-lesioned (DMNL) rats
also show altered ingestive responses to naloxone. The present study investigated the intrahypothalamic nerve pathways involved in these
DMNL effects and the response of the pathways to deprivation challenges
by placing knife cuts posterior (Post), lateral (Lat), ventral
(Vent), dorsal, or anterior to the DMN or by administering sham operations. One major finding was that rats with Post
or Vent were hypophagic (P < 0.05)
and had reduced body weight but responded normally to deprivation
challenges. Post and Lat groups were hypodipsic
(P < 0.05), but plasma
Na+,
K+, and osmolality and 24-h
post-water-deprivation drinking responses were similar in all groups.
Naloxone did not suppress the intake of Post rats. It appears that the
hypophagia and the reduced body weight after DMNL involve fibers
entering or leaving the DMN from ventral and posterior directions, and
they may be part of an opioid feeding system.
food intake; water intake; 2-deoxy-D-glucose; naloxone; cholecystokinin; body weight; opioids
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B. M. King, J. T. Cook, K. N. Rossiter, and B. L. Rollins Obesity-inducing amygdala lesions: examination of anterograde degeneration and retrograde transport Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, April 1, 2003; 284(4): R965 - R982. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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