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Thermoregulation Laboratory, Legacy Holladay Park Medical Center, Portland, Oregon 97208-3950
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ABSTRACT |
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This paper disproves the common belief that
all doses of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that are commonly referred to as
biphasic fever inducing (
2 µg/kg) cause truly biphasic responses. A
catheter was implanted into the right jugular vein of several strains
of adult male rats, and the animals were habituated to the experimental conditions. At an ambient temperature of 30.0°C, loosely restrained animals were injected with a 10 µg/kg dose of LPS (various
preparations), and their colonic
(Tc) and tail skin temperatures
were monitored (from
1 h before to
7 h after the injection). The
results are presented as time graphs and phase-plane plots; in the
latter case the rate of change of
Tc is plotted against
Tc. In experiment 1 the intravenous injection of LPS (from
Escherichia coli 0111:B4, phenol
extract) into the rats (Bkl:Wistar) induced a triphasic febrile
response, as is obvious from time graphs of
Tc (3 peaks), time graphs of
effector activity (3 waves of tail skin vasoconstriction), and
phase-plane plots (3 complete loops); the injection of saline (control)
induced no Tc changes. We analyzed
whether the triphasic pattern was due to some peculiarities of the
experimental design, i.e., the pyrogen preparation used
(experiment 2) or the rat strain tested (experiment 3) or whether
this pattern reflects a more general law. In
experiment 2 we used the same (phenol)
preparation of different LPS (from Shigella
flexneri 1A and Salmonella
typhosa) and a different preparation (TCA extract) of
the same LPS (E. coli). Regardless
of the LPS used, rats of the Bkl:Wistar strain responded to the 10 µg/kg dose with the triphasic fever. In experiment 3, rats of other strains [Bkl:Sprague-Dawley and
Sim:(LE)fBR(Black-hooded)] were tested. Again, all animals
responded to the 10 µg/kg dose of E. coli LPS (phenol extract) with the triphasic fever.
Because all fevers caused by four different LPS preparations in three rat strains were triphasic, the triphasic pattern is likely to constitute an intrinsic characteristic of the febrile response.
febrile response; skin vasoconstriction; lipopolysaccharide preparations; rat strains; body temperature oscillations; nonlinear dynamics; phase plane
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INTRODUCTION |
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EXPERIMENTALLY, the thermoregulatory response to systemic inflammation is usually studied by inducing fever with a bolus peripheral (often intravenous) injection of a pyrogenic substance into laboratory animals (most commonly rats or rabbits). Regardless of whether the injected pyrogen is "exogenous" [such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and polyriboinosinic:polyribocytidilic acid (poly I:C)] or "endogenous" (such as interleukin 1, interleukin 6, and tumor necrosis factor), its injection results in a monophasic body temperature (Tb) rise if the dose of the pyrogen is low (i.e., just above threshold) but a biphasic Tb rise if the dose is several times to four orders higher. This rule has been repeatedly confirmed in a variety of species, including the rabbit (22) and the rat (29, 32).
In contrast to experimental fevers that are usually described as monophasic or biphasic, fevers observed in clinical practice are often polycyclic (46). (To accommodate the diversity of terms used in the literature, we treat the terms "phasic," "cyclic," "modal," and "peaked" interchangeably.) However, the polyphasic pattern of clinical fevers is commonly assumed to simply reflect the cyclic release of pathogens into the blood in many infections, with malaria being the best-known example of the correlation between Tb and parasitemia (18). Yet there is some anecdotal evidence (stemming from the "old" literature and the informal exchange of laboratory experience among colleagues) suggesting that a single injection of a pyrogen, even under controlled experimental conditions, can also induce a polyphasic response. Thus, "many-peaked fevers [in response to large doses of exogenous pyrogens, with] the febrile reaction being characteristically cyclic" have been described by Grant in his outstanding review (11). Similarly, the capability of poly I:C to cause triphasic fevers in rabbits has been noticed by Kimura-Takeuchi and colleagues in the laboratory of Krueger (J. M. Krueger, personal communication), even though in the published report (14) the authors did not specify the number of phases observed.
Over the past two years, our laboratory has investigated the
thermoregulatory responses of ~1,000 rats to intravenous LPS in a
wide dose range. A very unusual phenomenon was observed when the dose
of LPS was
10 µg/kg. The responses of the rats to these doses
appeared biphasic only if we stopped monitoring them at 3-4 h
postinjection; whenever the animals were observed for longer periods
(30, 33), three distinct febrile phases occurred (even if published
data reflected shorter periods of time, as they did in Ref. 33).
In experiment 1 we specifically address the issue of the number of phases in the so-called biphasic LPS-induced fever. In experiments 2 and 3 we analyze whether the revealed febrile pattern reflects some peculiarities of the experimental design (the pyrogen preparation used, the rat strain tested) or, alternatively, is independent of these details and, rather, reflects a general law.
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METHODS |
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Animals
Two-month-old male rats of several different strains purchased from two different sources (see Experimental Protocols) were used. The animals' body mass was ~200 g at the time of delivery and ~300 g at the time of experiment. The rats were initially housed three per box; after surgery they were caged singly. The room was on a 12:12-h light-dark cycle (lights on from 0700 to 1900); ambient temperature (Ta) was maintained at 22°C. Food [Teklad Rodent Diet (W) 8604, Harlan Teklad, Madison, WI] and water were available ad libitum. The animals were handled and weighed regularly. They were also habituated (5 training sessions, 3-4 h each) to a cylindrical restrainer that limited their back-and-forth movements and prevented them from turning around; the same restrainer was used later in the experiments. All experiments were performed during the light phase (measurements started between 0800 and 0900); during this phase, rats do not actively use behavioral thermoregulation but readily recruit autonomic thermoeffector mechanisms (40). To prevent the development of tolerance to LPS, each animal was injected with LPS only once. At the end of the study the animals were killed with pentobarbital sodium (20 mg/kg iv). The protocols were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.Surgical Preparation
General information. Each animal underwent two surgical operations separated by 1 wk. During the first surgery an acrylic platform was secured to the rat's skull. During the second surgery a catheter was implanted in the right jugular vein, and its exteriorized end was placed into a hollow pedestal affixed to the platform (see below). At 0.25 h before each surgery, each rat was given an antibiotic (enrofloxacin, 12 mg/kg sc) and anesthetized with ketamine-xylazine-acepromazine cocktail (55.6, 5.5, and 1.1 mg/kg ip, respectively). During each surgery the animal's body was heated by a Deltaphase Isothermal Pad (Braintree Scientific, Braintree, MA). The animal was immediately placed under a heating lamp for recovery after surgery, then it was transferred to its cage.
Surgery 1. The head of the anesthetized animal was placed into a stereotaxic instrument (model 900, David Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA), and a 1.5-cm-long incision was made over the sagittal suture. Subcutaneous tissues were removed by scraping. The bone was cleansed with a 3% hydrogen peroxide solution and dried with 98% ethanol. Four holes (each 0.8 mm diameter) were drilled, and four miniature stainless steel screws were screwed in the bone. The dried surface of the skull and the screws were covered with dental acrylic in such a manner that a round (~1 cm diameter) platform with a flat surface was formed. After the acrylic hardened, the rat was released from the stereotaxic instrument.
Surgery 2. The animal was placed on an operating board (Harvard Apparatus, S. Natick, MA), and a 1-cm longitudinal incision was made on the ventral surface of the neck, 1 cm to the right of the trachea. The muscles were retracted, and the right jugular vein was exposed and freed from its surrounding connective tissue. A silicone rubber catheter (0.5 mm ID, 0.9 mm OD) containing heparinized (100 U/ml) pyrogen-free saline (PFS) was passed into the superior vena cava through the jugular vein. The 15-cm free end of the catheter was pulled under the skin to the head. The wound on the ventral surface of the neck was sutured. The free end of the catheter was rolled into a coil and placed into a polypropylene vial (pedestal); the pedestal was then affixed to the platform with dental acrylic and protected with a screw-on cap. On the day after the surgery the catheter was flushed with heparinized PFS.
Instrumentation
For an experiment, each animal was instrumented with thermocouples to record temperatures of the colon (Tc; 9 cm from the anus) and tail skin (Tsk). The thermocouples were connected to a data logger (model AI-24, Dianachart, Rockaway, NJ) and then to a personal computer. The animal was then placed into its restrainer and transferred to a climatic chamber (Forma Scientific, Marietta, OH) set to a Ta of 30.0°C (upper limit of the thermoneutral zone for rats) and relative humidity of 50%. The exteriorized portion of the intravenous catheter was pulled through a wall port and connected to a syringe. After a 1-h stabilization period the measurements were begun, and Tc, Tsk, and Ta were sampled every 2 min for 8 h.Experimental Protocols
Experiment 1. Experiment 1 was designed to determine the number of phases in the thermal response to what is thought to be a typical biphasic fever-inducing dose of LPS, i.e., 10 µg/kg. Rats of the Wistar (Bkl:Wistar) strain (B & K Universal, Kent, WA) were instrumented as described above and, 1 h after the beginning of recording, injected with LPS or PFS (1 ml/kg iv). The LPS was the phenol-extracted preparation of Escherichia coli 0111:B4 LPS (lot no. 35H4086, Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO); the same LPS is currently used by several groups working in the field (7, 16, 23). The order of the injections was alternated (i.e., one-half of the animals were injected with LPS on day 3 and with PFS on day 7; one-half of the animals received PFS first and then LPS).
Experiment 2. Experiment 2 was designed to investigate whether the triphasic febrile pattern (revealed in experiment 1) was due to some peculiarity of the LPS preparation. On day 3 postsurgery the animals (Bkl:Wistar) were instrumented and, 1 h after the recording was started, injected with the same dose (10 µg/kg) of the following preparations of LPS (all from Sigma Chemical): E. coli serotype 0111:B4, prepared by TCA extraction (lot no. 25H4008); Shigella flexneri serotype 1A, prepared by phenol extraction (lot no. 47F4009); and Salmonella typhosa, prepared by phenol extraction (lot no. 81H4018).
Experiment 3. In experiment 3 we investigated whether the triphasic febrile pattern was due to a peculiarity of the animal strain. Rats of two other strains, Sprague-Dawley (Bkl:Sprague-Dawley, B & K Universal) and Long-Evans [Sim:(LE)fBR(Black-hooded), Simonsen Laboratories, Gilroy, CA] were tested. All tests were performed on day 3 postsurgery. The animals were instrumented and, 1 h after the recording was started, injected with the 10 µg/kg dose of phenol-extracted E. coli 0111:B4 LPS.
Thermometry in Restrained Rats: A Special Consideration
Thermophysiological data obtained in restrained animals (as in the present study) are often thought to be contaminated by stress hyperthermia, a potential source of various artifacts. Such a critique is often based on the fact that the basal Tb is higher in restrained than in freely behaving rats; e.g., compare a Tc of 37.8-38.4°C reported for well-habituated, restrained male rats of the Wistar strain (31) with an intra-abdominal temperature (Tab) of 37.0-37.3°C for freely moving male Wistar (24) or Sprague-Dawley (17) rats. Yet, two factors seem to explain the reported difference in Tb better than the hypothetical stress.First, during telemetric measurements the rats are usually left in their home cages at a "room temperature" (loosely controlled at some level within 18-26°C). In contrast to this, wire thermometry requires that animals be brought to the experimental setup (usually an environmental chamber); in this case the Ta (as well as the air humidity) is tightly controlled, usually at the upper limit of thermoneutrality, i.e., 30.0°C (8, 41). Two recent extensive studies by Gordon and Yang (9, 47) show that the Tab of freely moving male rats during the day is 37.3-37.4°C at any Ta between 22.0 and 29.5°C [compare with studies by Long et al. (17) and Nakamori et al. cited above (24)], whereas if Ta increases from 29.5 to 32.0°C, the Tab rises to 37.8°C [compare with our study (31)].
Second, if measured correctly (
6.5 cm beyond the anus; see Ref. 4),
Tc is one of the highest
temperatures in the rat's body. It has been well documented that
Tc exceeds the aortic temperature by 0.1-0.8°C (4), and it is very likely that it also exceeds Tab, especially if the latter is
measured near the abdominal wall. Indeed, in recent experiments,
Székely (personal communication) found a difference of a few
10ths of a degree between the Tc
(measured by a thermocouple) and
Tab (measured by a telemetric
probe) in the same rat.
We conclude, therefore, that the basal Tb of restrained rats (when they are well habituated to their stocks) is comparable to that of freely moving rats and that thermometry in the restrained rat, if done correctly, remains a valuable method.
Data Processing and Analysis
To evaluate the thermal response, the absolute value of Tc was used. To evaluate the thermoeffector response of tail skin vasculature, the heat loss index (HLI) was calculated: HLI = (Tsk
Ta)/(Tc
Ta). As explained
elsewhere (28), the HLI changes between 0 (maximal vasoconstriction)
and 1 (maximal dilation), with a decrease in the HLI corresponding to a
decrease in the Newtonian heat loss from the tail. To compare the
Tc and HLI curves between the
treatments (LPS vs. PFS, experiment
1), a goodness-of-fit crossover test was applied: we
counted the number of times the curves crossed over one another and, by
summing the tail of a binomial distribution, determined the probability
of the found number (or fewer) of crossovers occurring (35). To confirm
the number of febrile phases found, the data were plotted in the
phase-plane format [i.e., the rate of displacement change vs. the
displacement; in our case the rate of
Tc change,
T'c(t),
vs. Tc], and the number of
loops (cycles) was counted. General information on this topological
representation of the transient performance of a system can be found in
handbooks on engineering (10); some physiological applications of the
phase plane have been outlined by Partridge (26).
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RESULTS |
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Experiment 1
Whereas the injection of PFS in the rats (Bkl:Wistar) did not affect their thermal state, the administration of LPS (E. coli 0111:B4, phenol extract; 10 µg/kg iv) induced a triphasic febrile response, with the Tc maxima at ~60, 140, and 300 min postinjection (Fig. 1, top). Each Tc rise was preceded by a distinct wave of tail skin vasoconstriction (a drop in HLI; Fig. 1, bottom). The null hypothesis (assumes that the responses to PFS and LPS are alike) was easily rejected (P < 0.0001) for both Tc and HLI cases. The triphasic character of the fever was confirmed by the number of cycles counted on the phase-plane plot (Fig. 2). The triphasic response appeared to be an example of damped oscillations (the magnitude of the 3rd loop is much lower than that of the 1st loop) overlapped with an overall slow shift of the system's trajectory to a higher Tc. (If the shift were subtracted, this would have transferred the plot to a concentric 3-loop coil with the loop size decreasing from outside to inside; a straight line drawn across the loops, from inside to outside the coil, would have intersected the coil 3 times, once for each loop, or phase. The legend to Fig. 2 may be helpful in reading phase-plane plots.)
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Experiment 2
Regardless of which LPS preparation was used [E. coli, TCA extract (Fig. 3), Sh. flexneri, phenol extract (Fig. 4), or S. typhosa, phenol extract (Fig. 5)], rats of the Bkl:Wistar strain responded to the injection of a 10 µg/kg iv dose with a triphasic Tc rise (Figs. 3A, 4A, and 5A, respectively, top). For all fevers, each rise in Tc was preceded by a separate burst of tail skin vasoconstriction (Figs. 3A, 4A, and 5A, bottom). For all fevers the triphasic pattern was confirmed in a phase-plane plot (Figs. 3B, 4B, and 5B).
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Experiment 3
Regardless of which strain of rats [Bkl:Sprague-Dawley (Fig. 6) or Sim:(LE)fBR(Black-hooded) (Fig. 7)] was tested, the animals responded to the injection of a 10 µg/kg iv dose of E. coli LPS (phenol extract) with a triphasic Tc rise (Figs. 6A and 7A, respectively, top). For both strains, each rise in Tc was preceded by a separate burst of tail skin vasoconstriction (Figs. 6A and 7A, bottom). For both strains the triphasic pattern of the febrile response was confirmed in a phase-plane plot (Figs. 6B and 7B).
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DISCUSSION |
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Triphasic Fever
Within the last decade, quite a few studies on fever have been dedicated to identifying the separate triggers and differentiating the biochemical/physiological portraits of the two febrile phases (19-21, 27, 29, 34, 42, 44). The methodological issues related to distinguishing between monophasic and biphasic responses have also been subjected to an in-depth analysis (15). In addition, the specific roles of febrile phases I and II in the adaptation to infection have been discussed (29, 34). Despite such keen attention, the phenomenon of the bimodality remains an unsolved mystery: not only is there little agreement on the details of the underlying machinery (for review see Ref. 27), but, as the present report shows, even the number of phases in the "biphasic" fever might have been miscounted.The results of experiment 1 demonstrate that the febrile response of the rat strain studied (Bkl:Wistar) to the preparation of LPS used (E. coli 0111 B:4, phenol extract) in the dose chosen (~10 times higher than the monophasic fever-inducing dose) consisted of three phases. Each phase was characterized by a distinct Tc rise (with the maxima at ~60, 140, and 300 min postinjection), a distinct burst of effector activity (tail skin vasoconstriction), and a separate loop on a phase plane [T'c(t) vs. Tc]. None of the three phases could have been explained by the experimental procedure per se or by the circadian rhythm of Tc, because no febrile phases occurred when the injection of LPS was replaced with the injection of the same volume of PFS. It is reasonable to suggest, therefore, that the triphasic response is an authentic response of the animals tested to the LPS injected, but is this triphasic pattern characteristic for this particular rat strain (tested in experiment 1) only, for the preparation of LPS (used in this experiment) only, or, alternatively, for LPS fever in the rat in general?
LPS Preparations
Numerous LPS preparations (extracted from different bacteria and by different procedures) are commercially available. The difference in these preparations has been repeatedly blamed for contributing to the great variability of physiological responses to LPS within the same species or even strain (12). Wan and Grimble (45) reported that LPS from E. coli 0127:B8 prepared by butanol extraction induced fever in rats, whereas a TCA extract of the same LPS (as well as of LPS from the 055:B5 serotype of E. coli) caused hypothermia. Horan and coauthors (12) found differences of two orders among the potencies of three different LPS preparations (from E. coli serotype 0127:B8 prepared by TCA extraction, E. coli 0127:B8 prepared by phenol extraction, and E. coli 026:B6 prepared by TCA extraction) in inducing fever (and its underlying thermogenic response) in the rat; the phenol extract was ranked the most potent.We asked whether the triphasic febrile pattern observed in the present work might have been specific for the pyrogen tested, either its bacterial source (E. coli serotype 0111:B4) or the procedure used for its preparation (phenol extraction). However, experiment 2 rejected such a proposition: regardless of the source of LPS (E. coli 0111:B4, Sh. flexneri 1A, or S. typhosa) and the extraction procedure (based on phenol or TCA), the febrile pattern was always triphasic. Furthermore, all preparations tested produced quantitatively comparable responses. It can be excluded, therefore, that the triphasic pattern is just a peculiar attribute of the febrile response to one particular LPS preparation.
Rat Strains
Another possibility we considered was that the triphasic fevers observed in experiments 1 and 2 could have reflected just a specific feature of the rat strain used, i.e., Wistar. This possibility was definitely worth exploring, because the rat's thermoregulation appears to possess some strain specificity. Thus, as reviewed by Gordon (8), the "normal" level of Tb, the magnitude of its diurnal change, the preferred Ta, the limit of heat tolerance, the resistance to hypothermia, the mass of brown adipose tissue, and several other traits often differ distinctly between such strains as genetically obese and lean, hypertensive and normotensive, albino (e.g., Wistar or Sprague-Dawley) and pigmented (e.g., Long-Evans). Albino rats are less active, have a lower Tb, and prefer a higher Ta than their pigmented counterparts (8). Albino strains are also distinct in many other (nonthermoregulatory) physiological and behavioral aspects (2). It would not be surprising at all if the febrile responsiveness varies within the rat species, at least to some extent.An example of such variability has been provided by studies of the Brattleboro strain (genetically deficient in arginine vasopressin; suffers from diabetes insipidus). The responsiveness of Brattleboro rats to a peripheral administration of LPS has been repeatedly found to differ from that of the parental strain, Long-Evans, and another commonly used strain, Sprague-Dawley (5, 13, 25, 39, 43). In work by Stitt and Shimada (39), Brattleboro rats responded with fever to the dose of LPS that caused hypothermia in the Sprague-Dawley rats. [To make the picture more complete, it should be added, however, that the 5 cited reports are mutually contradictory (for a critical analysis, see Ref. 39) and that a 6th study (37) failed to reveal any peculiarities in the febrile responsiveness of the Brattleboro strain.] Even more intriguing data have been obtained by comparison between genetically lean and genetically obese Zucker rats. The two are not only known to respond differently to pyrogenic stimuli (3) but, moreover, have been recently shown to respond to the same dose of LPS by developing a different number of febrile phases (36).
In experiment 3 we tested animals of pigmented, i.e., Long-Evans [Sim:(LE)fBR(Black-hooded)], and albino strains, i.e., Wistar (Bkl:Wistar) and Sprague-Dawley (Bkl:Sprague-Dawley); moreover, the animals were purchased from two different companies. Despite this heterogeneity, all the animals uniformly responded to intravenous LPS with a triphasic febrile response. Furthermore, while this study was in preparation, our pilot experiments (n = 3; unpublished observations) with another Wistar strain [Sim:(WI)fBR] showed that these rats similarly developed triphasic fevers in response to E. coli 0111:B4 LPS (phenol preparation, 10-µg/kg iv). The present study suggests, therefore, that the triphasic febrile pattern is not just a peculiarity of a certain rat strain. Yet, to be objective, we should add that our study did not include several potentially interesting rat strains, such as Brattleboro and Zucker (see above), Lewis (possesses a wide range of endocrine and immune abnormalities) (38), and FOK (heat resistant) (6).
Concluding Remark
It is important to add that we do not reject the well-established ability of some doses of LPS to induce biphasic fevers in several species, including the rat. If the dose of LPS is within a narrow range of ~2-8 µg/kg (i.e., higher than the monophasic fever-inducing dose but lower than 10 times that), the febrile response of the rat may be truly biphasic. We do dispute, however, the belief that all doses of LPS that are commonly referred to as biphasic fever-inducing doses (10-10,000 µg/kg) cause only two Tb peaks. The present paper and its companion (30) disprove this belief by showing that higher doses of LPS induce not biphasic but triphasic responses. Because all fevers caused by different LPS preparations in three different rat strains were triphasic, we suggest that the triphasic pattern constitutes an intrinsic characteristic of the febrile response. The fact that a single bolus injection of a pyrogen may result in several Tb rises is likely to change our ideas on the nature of polycyclic, multipeaked fevers normally occurring in natural diseases. Interestingly, Carlson et al. (1) recently showed that the febrile response of rats to live intravenously administered E. coli is indistinguishable from that to LPS; both responses closely resemble the triphasic fevers described here.Perspectives
All I could see from where I stood Was three long mountains and a wood. E. St. V. Millay, "Renascence"This study immediately raises two questions. The first question is whether febrile phase III is the last one. What would have happened if the rats tested in the present experiments had been injected with a higher dose of LPS and/or observed for a longer period of time? Is it possible that we would have seen, in Millay's words, more "mountains" behind the puzzling "wood"? We do not have an answer to this question, but we think that the more general term "polyphasic" (or "polycyclic") may be preferred to the specific "triphasic" for describing fevers with more than two Tb peaks.
The second question is why, over the last few decades, everyone in the field [including ourselves (27, 29)] seemed consistently to see only "two mountains," whereas, from where we are presently standing, "three long mountains" are not only visible but are strikingly obvious? This question is answered in the companion paper (30).
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Discussions on the phase plane with Dr. L. D. Partridge and statistical consultations with Dr. L. D. Homer are gratefully acknowledged. Dr. J. M. Macpherson kindly reviewed an early draft of the manuscript and provided important feedback. The authors also thank N. V. Romanovsky for indispensable help with the animal care and J. Emerson-Cobb for excellent editorial assistance.
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FOOTNOTES |
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V. A. Kulchitsky was on leave from the Institute of Physiology, Minsk 220072, Belarus.
This study was made possible by intramural support and a research grant-in-aid from Legacy Health System (Portland, OR).
Address for reprint requests: A. A. Romanovsky, Thermoregulation Laboratory, Legacy Holladay Park Medical Center, PO Box 3950, Portland, OR 97208-3950.
Received 14 July 1997; accepted in final form 18 March 1998.
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