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COMPARATIVE AND EVOLUTIONARY PHYSIOLOGY
1Physiology, School of Biomedical, Biomolecular and Chemical Science, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Perth, Australia; 2Brain Function Research Group, School of Physiology, University of the Witwatersrand Medical School, Parktown, South Africa; and 3Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming
Submitted 17 November 2006 ; accepted in final form 3 January 2007
| ABSTRACT |
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thermoregulation; brain temperature; primates; hominids; dehydration
The cranial vasculature of modern humans shares many characteristics with other large primates, including the arterial supply to the brain and the venous drainage of the scalp (48). Because the heat produced by the brain is removed by the blood perfusing it, the vasculature is important in brain temperature regulation (44). A key element of the evidence adduced in support of human selective brain cooling is the apparent occurrence of selective brain cooling in other primates with similar vascular anatomy (11, 14). These comparisons are important because, while the brain temperature of nonhuman primates can be measured, direct measurements of brain temperature in healthy humans are nonexistent. Several research articles present evidence that, at times, the brain of monkey can be cooler than a temperature measured elsewhere in the body (21, 22), but an earlier comprehensive paper reported that monkeys do not exhibit selective brain cooling (26). All of those investigations were conducted with the primates either anesthetized or in restraining chairs. Restraint may well interfere with primate thermoregulatory mechanisms, and perhaps more importantly, may suppress any possible selective brain cooling. In artiodactyl mammals, selective brain cooling is attenuated, or abolished, by fear-associated activation of the sympathetic nervous system (14, 41).
As far as we can establish, all investigations of brain temperature regulation in nonhuman primates have been conducted on macaques or squirrel monkeys. The ecological habits and selective pressures on these primates were presumably very different from early hominids. The primate that coevolved with the hominids and faced with them the thermal challenges of leaving the canopy forests for more open, drier habitats, was the baboon (6). Extant baboons occur in open habitats as diverse as the coastal "fynbos" of the southern tip of Africa (4, 30), high-altitude mountain grasslands (9), and the dry beds of ephemeral rivers in the Namib Desert (5).
Although the morphology is not unique to the genus (32), baboons have conspicuously large muzzles for primates (see Fig. 1). In artiodactyls, the mammals with the most efficient selective brain cooling known (2, 41), evaporation from the large surface area in the nasal mucosa provides the heat sink for selective brain cooling. Nearly 20 years ago, Wheeler (49) asked "whether baboons, like other savanna mammals, can use the venous blood cooled in the nasal chamber to keep their brain cool," a question that has not been answered. In an attempt to provide an answer, we have measured hypothalamic, carotid arterial blood, and abdominal temperatures of unrestrained baboons in a climatic chamber. In the expectation that if a nonhuman primate can implement selective brain cooling, it will do so when unrestrained and exposed to high ambient heat load, we subjected the baboons to environmental conditions that simulated the most extreme desert habitat that extant baboons inhabit, the ephemeral riverbeds of the Namib Desert (5).
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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The study was approved by the Animal Ethics Screening Committee of the University of the Witwatersrand (protocol number 98/84/5).
Surgery. With the baboons under general anesthesia, we implanted three miniature thermometric data loggers (see below) and attached sensors for temperature measurement. Anesthesia was induced by intramuscular injection of ketamine (10 mg/kg, Anaket-V, Centaur Laboratories, Johannesburg, South Africa) and intravenous injection of thiopentone sodium (100 mg, Intraval sodium, Merial, Johannesburg, South Africa) and maintained with halothane (0.52% in oxygen, Fluothane; Astrazeneca, Johannesburg, South Africa). Respiratory rate, heart rate, and blood pressure were monitored throughout surgery. A 50-mg enrofloxacin tablet (Baytril; Bayer, Johannesburg, South Africa) was placed in surgical sites on the head. Each baboon received long-acting penicillin (3 ml im, Peni LA; Phenix, Johannesburg, South Africa) and an opiate analgesic (buprenorphine, 0.3 mg im, Temgesic; Schering-Plough, Johannesburg, South Africa). After surgery, baboons were returned to their home cages.
Temperatures were measured at three sites in each animal, in the hypothalamus, in the carotid artery, and within the abdominal cavity. For measurement of carotid arterial blood temperature, a thermistor in a blind-ended, thin-walled polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) catheter (OD 0.9 mm; Straight Aortic Flush 4F catheter; Cordis, The Netherlands) was inserted into the left common carotid artery near the larynx and advanced 100 mm into the artery, toward the heart. The catheter was secured by a purse-string suture in the artery wall. Outside the artery, the PTFE tube was connected to a silicone rubber sheath conveying leads from the thermistor to the thermometric data logger. The logger was placed in a subcutaneous pouch over the ventral abdomen.
For measurement of the brain temperature, a second logger also was positioned subcutaneously over the abdomen. The silicone sheath containing its leads was advanced subcutaneously to the skull, where it was connected to an extracranial head plate and intracranial guide tube. The guide tube, constructed from cellulose acetate butyrate tubing (length 38 mm, OD 3.2 mm, ID 1.6 mm; World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL) sealed at the tip by a stainless-steel cap, was inserted through the skull at the bregma, via a burr hole. Coordinates were determined from sections of heads of dead baboons of similar size, so that the probe tip would be positioned in or near the hypothalamus. Correct positioning was verified radiographically at the end of surgery. The brain guide tube was connected to a small plastic headplate (10 x 10 x 3 mm), which was secured to the skull by two bone screws. For measurement of abdominal temperature, a third logger, with an internal temperature sensor, was inserted into the abdominal cavity, via an incision near the site where the other loggers had been positioned subcutaneously.
All of the loggers were encased in inert wax (Elvax, Mini-Mitter, Sunriver, USA). Because the loggers and their attachments were implanted, there was no external instrumentation on the animals. Baboons are intolerant of external instruments, a constraint that previously has required researchers to confine them to primate-restraining chairs.
At the end of the experiment, using the same anesthetic and surgical procedures as before, we removed the data loggers, headplates, guide tubes, and thermistors. All loggers were in good physical order, wounds had healed, and there were no signs of infection. Examination of the carotid artery at recovery surgery revealed no occlusion or clotting along the length of the intravascular catheters, that is, the thermistors had measured the temperature of free-flowing arterial blood.
Thermometry.
The miniature data loggers used for the brain and carotid arterial blood temperature measurement (StowAway XTI, Onset Computer; Pocasset, MA) had outside dimensions of
50 x 45 x 20 mm and a mass of
40 g, when covered in wax. Abdominal temperature loggers, with internal temperature sensors (StowAway Tidbit, Onset Computer), had outside dimensions of
30 x 41 x 17 mm, and weighed 20 g when covered with wax. All loggers had a storage capacity of 32 kB and had been custom-modified for us to measure from +34°C to +46°C and to have resolution of 0.04°C. The scan interval of the loggers was set at 5 min. Brain and blood temperature sensors were constructed from ruggedized glass-coated bead thermistors with insulated extension leads (bead diameter 0.3 mm; ABOE3-BR11KA1033N; Thermometrics, Edison, NJ). Wax-coated loggers, with their sensors, were calibrated against a high-accuracy thermometer (Quat 100, Heraeus, Hanau, Germany) in an insulated water bath, and all had a calibrated accuracy equal to, or better than, one sampling step of the logger (0.04°C).
Experimental protocol. Ten days after surgery, two baboons at a time were sedated by intramuscular injection of ketamine (5 mg/kg) and transported to a climate chamber, where they were housed individually in juxtaposed cages of dimensions 0.9 m wide x 0.9 m deep x 1.2 m high, and received water and food as before. Throughout the procedure, the baboons were unrestrained in their cages. They were free to clamber around the cages and had sufficient room to adopt thermoregulatory postures (5). Their cages were cleaned once per day, at feeding time, but otherwise, the baboons were disturbed as little as possible. They were inspected regularly through a peephole, by researchers and veterinary staff. The 12:12-h light-dark cycle was maintained, with lights on at 0600 local time. Illumination at baboon height was about 100 lux when the chamber lights were on. A radio tuned to a music station was switched on, in the climatic chamber, whenever the lights were on. The baboons were given toys and a foraging board for cage enrichment.
For the first 7 days in the climatic chamber, ambient temperature was maintained at 22°C. Then the animals were exposed for 7 days to a cyclic protocol simulating a desert environment. Dry-bulb temperature was held at 15°C overnight, and was increased at 0800 to 25°C, at 0900 to 32°C, and at 1000 to 35°C. Dry-bulb temperature was decreased at 1500 to 30°C, at 1600 to 23°C, and at 1700 to 15°C. For the male baboon and one of the females, mean radiant temperature was kept equal to dry-bulb temperature during the heating protocol. For the other females, to increase the midday heat load, radiant heat was applied each day from a 500-W lamp positioned 1.5 m above each animal, switched on between 1100 and 1400, when dry-bulb temperature was 35°C. Black globe temperature, measured 1 m above the floor inside the cage, was 42°C when the lamp was on. Relative humidity was maintained at 50% throughout experiments. Wind flow in the chamber was turbulent, with speed <0.5 m/s.
On three of the seven days of the simulated desert environment, water was withheld from the baboons, and fruit removed from their diet. Drinking water was removed at 0900 and returned 51 h later, at 1200. Free-living baboons prefer to drink in the hottest part of the day (5, 29).
Data analysis. Electronic failure prevented us acquiring a usable data set from one of the female baboons, and body temperature measurements on one 22°C and one (hydrated) day from the simulated desert environment, for another of the female baboons. For that animal, therefore, we obtained 3,456 simultaneous measurements of each of hypothalamic, carotid arterial blood and abdominal temperature, evenly spaced over the day and night during the study. For the other two baboons, we obtained the full 4,032 simultaneous measurements of the temperature at each body site during the study. Those original 5-min recordings of body temperatures were used to find the overall mean and 24-h range of carotid arterial blood temperature, hypothalamic temperature, and abdominal temperature for the days when the baboons were at 22°C, when they were exposed to the desert protocol, and when they were exposed to the desert protocol without access to water. The means and ranges within each animal were compared with a 2-way repeated-measures ANOVA to determine whether temperatures at the three sites differed significantly from each other, and whether the different environmental treatments influenced them. The analysis had main effects of site of measurement (abdomen, carotid arterial blood, and brain) and environment (22°C, desert, and desert with no water). When differences were indicated by the ANOVA, a Student-Newman-Keuls (SNK) test was used to compare the three individual means or the treatments.
Following the approach of Jessen et al. (34), we analyzed the relationship between hypothalamic temperature and carotid arterial blood temperature in each animal by sorting all 5-min measurements, in that animal, into 0.1°C categories of carotid arterial blood temperature, and determining the mean, standard deviation, maxima and minima of hypothalamic temperature at each class of carotid arterial blood temperature. The frequencies at which each of the 0.1°C classes of carotid arterial blood temperature occurred also were determined. An equivalent procedure was used to compare hypothalamic temperature to abdominal temperature, and carotid arterial blood temperature to abdominal temperature.
The proportion of time that the animals spent with the hypothalamus cooler than the carotid arterial blood, the hypothalamus cooler than the abdomen, and the abdomen cooler than the carotid arterial blood was calculated for each animal, in each environment, by counting the number of 5-min observations of body temperature in which that condition was met, and expressing that count as a percentage of the total number of 5-min simultaneous observations of body temperatures.
The effect of rate of change of body temperature on the relationship between carotid arterial blood and hypothalamic temperatures also was assessed. First, the rate of change in carotid arterial blood temperature from one sample to the next (that is, the rate of change in temperature over 5 min) was calculated for the entire data set, for each animal. The difference between hypothalamic and carotid arterial blood temperature for each sample then was calculated, and plotted as a function of the rate of change in carotid arterial blood temperature during the previous 5 min. The relationship for each animal was analyzed using linear regression procedures.
| RESULTS |
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To test the hypothesis that some of the variability in the difference between hypothalamic and carotid arterial blood temperature was the result of a thermal lag during blood temperature changes, we correlated the rate of change in carotid arterial blood temperature between two subsequent 5-min samples with the difference between the hypothalamic and carotid arterial blood temperatures at the second sample. For each baboon, there was a significant relationship between these variables (for all animals P < 106, r2 = 0.06 0.10) with a negative slope (1.30, 1.42, and 1.73 for the three animals). The regression for one female baboon is illustrated in Fig. 6. The regression line shows that when carotid arterial blood temperature was increasing, hypothalamic temperature increased at a slower rate, resulting in a reduction in the difference between hypothalamic and carotid arterial blood temperature. Conversely, when carotid arterial blood temperature was decreasing, hypothalamic temperature decreased at a slower rate, resulting in an increase in the difference between hypothalamic and carotid arterial blood temperatures. While the negative association was significant, the coefficient of variability (r2) of the linear regressions revealed that 10% or less of the variance in the elevation of hypothalamic temperature was associated with the rate of change of the temperature of blood entering the brain.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Selective brain cooling is defined as the "lowering of brain temperature, either locally or as a whole, below arterial blood temperature" (31). In artiodactyl mammals the anatomical substrate for selective brain cooling is the carotid rete/cavernous sinus complex, where arterial blood destined for the brain loses heat to venous blood returning from evaporative surfaces in the upper respiratory tract. The circumstances in which those animals are most likely to use selective brain cooling are those of high thermal load, hypohydration, and absence of stress from human observers (41). Our baboons, in those circumstances, never exhibited selective brain cooling (Fig. 4), even though the brain temperatures of all three baboons reached 40°C, easily exceeding the threshold at which species with a carotid rete begin to implement selective brain cooling (41). Whatever the time of day, and whatever the conditions to which the baboons were exposed in the climatic chamber, the hypothalamic temperature was higher than the temperature of arterial blood leaving the heart by 0.5°C, on average, over the entire range of arterial blood temperatures that baboons experienced. The elevation of brain temperature above arterial blood temperature arises because the perfusing blood removes the heat produced locally in the brain (43), necessitating a gradient from brain to blood. The highest body temperatures we recorded in the baboons were brain temperatures. One conclusion that can be drawn from our results and the fact that baboons inhabit the Namib Desert is that selective brain cooling is not a prerequisite for desert habitation in mammals.
Though our baboons never exhibited selective brain cooling, their hypothalamic temperatures were below abdominal temperature for about 2% of the time. That phenomenon cannot be interpreted as thermal protection of the brain, since it occurred even when the baboons were at their coolest (Fig. 5, A and B). The only thermal protection afforded to the brain was that afforded to all organs cooled by the perfusion of arterial blood, namely cooling of the venous blood returning to the heart, with consequent cooling of arterial blood leaving the heart. That cornerstone of thermoregulatory responses to heat (8) was evident in the relationship between carotid arterial blood temperature and abdominal temperature (Fig. 5, DF), which exhibited a slope significantly less than 1. At low body temperatures, carotid arterial blood and abdominal temperatures were similar, but at high temperatures, the carotid arterial blood was cooler than the abdomen. Abdominal organs are the main source of endogenous heat in resting animals, and their metabolic heat is removed by the perfusing blood. Because the highest body temperatures occurred when the baboons were exposed to an ambient temperature of 35°C or higher (Fig. 2), cooling must have been predominantly evaporative. Evaporative cooling in baboons, as in humans, occurs mainly as surface cooling via sweating (23, 28).
Basic principles of thermodynamics dictate that the temperature of an organ, where the blood reaches thermal equilibrium with the tissue of that organ before leaving it (15), will be determined primarily by the temperature of the blood entering the organ, its flow rate, and the metabolic heat produced by the organ. If the temperature of the blood entering the organ changes, for physical reasons it will take some time for the organ's temperature to follow, and the faster the change of temperature, the greater will be the phase lag. In their pioneering paper on primate brain temperature, Hayward and Baker (26) cautioned against physiological misinterpretations of internal temperature differences that could be the result of thermal lag. We believe that failure to take account of the lag has induced some researchers to see selective brain cooling in species when none exists (42). We analyzed the consequences of the thermal lag in the brains of our baboons (Fig. 6) and identified an unequivocal, but small, contribution of the lag to the variance of the temperature difference between the hypothalamus and carotid arterial blood. If arterial blood temperature was increasing, the subsequent difference between the brain and blood temperature was smaller. The majority of the variance in that difference remains unexplained and presumably resides in instability of the relationship between brain metabolic heat production and cerebral blood flow (37). Because the instability occurred across the range of hypothalamic temperatures, and irrespective of the external environment, it is unlikely to have arisen from brain heat transfer directly to the environment, or to extracranial blood.
Although no one previously has reported brain temperature in an unrestrained nonhuman primate, brain temperatures have been measured in primates restrained in chairs. As far as we can establish, the first such measurement was hypothalamic temperature in a single, chronically restrained, rhesus monkey (24). Whenever brain temperature and carotid arterial blood temperature have been measured in the same animal (2527), brain temperature, just as in our baboons, always exceeded carotid arterial blood temperature, and changes in brain temperature paralleled those in carotid arterial blood temperature, with some lag. To the best of our knowledge, therefore, selective brain cooling never has been observed in a primate. Our finding that baboons never implemented selective brain cooling is important for primate ecological physiology, but perhaps more pertinent is the possibility that the physiology of the baboon can inform us regarding the physiology of the human.
Reviews that endorse the ability of both human and nonhuman primates to selectively cool the brain (11, 14) cite the papers of Fuller and Baker (22) and Fuller (21) as evidence. In those papers, hypothalamic temperature was compared with colonic temperature measured 60 mm from the anus, not to arterial blood temperature. We now have confirmed for baboons what already was known for sheep (36), namely, that temperatures measured in the abdomen cannot be used as surrogates for arterial blood temperature. As Baker et al. (3) pointed out, "rectal temperature in a monkey has a variable and unpredictable relationship to central arterial blood temperature". In our baboons, which never exhibited selective brain cooling, hypothalamic temperature sometimes was lower than abdominal temperature, and the likelihood of hypothalamic temperature being lower than abdominal temperature increased as body temperature rose. Consequently, manifesting a hypothalamic temperature below colonic temperature at high ambient temperature (22) provides no proof that a squirrel monkey can implement selective brain cooling.
Selective brain cooling has physiological advantages, not, as conventionally thought, in protecting the brain during hyperthermia, but in conserving water, by switching heat loss from evaporative to nonevaporative avenues (33, 41). Such a process potentially would benefit baboons in the arid, hot, open plains of Africa, which they inhabit. While baboons, like humans, lack the carotid rete present in artiodactyl mammals (16, 20), there are other potential means of achieving selective brain cooling (43). These are other means of 1) cooling of arterial blood en route to the brain, 2) cooling of the brain by entry of cool venous blood from the overlying skin, and 3) cooling of the base of the brain by evaporation in the upper airways.
Baboon brains derive their blood, as does the human brain, from the internal carotid and vertebrobasilar arteries (35, 48). These vessels, as described for rhesus monkeys, provide "a direct uninterrupted major vascular pathway from the intrathoracic vessels to the circle of Willis" (26). The internal carotids, but not the vertebrobasilar arteries, pass through the cavernous sinuses, venous lakes fed, in part, by veins draining the nasal mucosa and the skin of the head. Venous blood in the cavernous sinuses is therefore potentially cooler than the arterial blood. But the internal carotids curve, without ramification, through the sinuses (35), a configuration that does not allow sufficient heat transfer for appreciable cooling of the carotid arterial blood (55). Outside the sinuses, the trajectories of both the internal carotids and the vertebrobasilar arteries take them antiparallel to the veins draining the superficial tissues of the head and neck, hypothetically, offering a mechanism for countercurrent cooling of the arterial blood. Heat transfer analysis shows, though, that the conformation is such that the influence of these veins on arterial blood temperature is negligible (15, 44). One analysis (56) claimed that the temperature of carotid arterial blood could drop by more than 1°C in the human neck. Although that degree of arterial cooling may be possible if the venous blood was at 19°C (as assumed), such low temperatures have never been reported, and in one of the few direct measures of jugular temperature in humans, it exceeded carotid arterial blood temperature (45).
Brain cooling by venous blood from the head skin need not occur via heat exchange with arterial blood, but could occur directly if emissary veins were to carry the blood through the skull into the brain, a mechanism proposed for hyperthermic humans (12). Baboons, like humans, have emissary veins (48). That proposal invokes a direction change of emissary blood flow during hyperthermia, to enter rather than leave the cranial cavity. Careful Doppler measurement of flow velocity in several emissary veins of healthy hyperthermic volunteers, with their faces fanned, in contrast to the study of Cabanac and Brinnel (12), failed to detect such a direction change; flow always was outward (18). Even if relatively-cool blood did enter the cranium via emissary veins, that blood would influence the temperature of only the most superficial layers of the brain in humans (7, 50) and in nonhuman primates (26). So, even though the blood flow to the skin of the head increases about three times in hyperthermic baboons (23), that blood can have little or no direct effect on deep brain temperature.
The final hypothetical way by which the baboons could implement selective brain cooling is via evaporation in the upper airways, and conductive cooling of adjacent brain tissue. Such a mechanism also has been proposed for humans (39, 52). However, heat transfer analysis again shows that the capacity of such a mechanism for human brain cooling is negligible (54), a conclusion confirmed by direct measurement of brain temperature during ventilation of the upper airways of brain-injured patients (1), and by analysis of time-dependent latencies in brain stem evoked potentials in healthy volunteers breathing dry air at 1°C (40). Thus, on the basis of evidence from human and other nonhuman primates, contrary to Pochron (46), the cranial morphology of baboons does not host a selective cooling system for the brain. That conclusion is supported by our observations, which show that baboons cannot control brain temperature independently of carotid arterial blood temperature.
The absence of selective brain cooling in hyperthermic baboons, especially when they were deprived of drinking water, and its absence in reports about other nonhuman primates, seriously undermines the notion that humans can implement selective brain cooling (10, 14). Measurement of brain temperature in healthy hyperthermic humans has not been attempted. The notion that humans have access to selective brain cooling has been proposed along three lines: 1) by inference, from the presence of supposed selective brain cooling in nonhuman primates (11, 14), 2) by experiments that often use tympanic membrane temperature as a surrogate for brain temperature in humans (13, 47, 51, 53), and 3) by direct measurement of brain temperature in patients with brain pathology, having craniostomies for therapeutic reasons (38). Our results directly refute that the first line of argument showing that hyperthermic baboons do not exhibit selective brain cooling. We cannot find convincing evidence that any primate species does so.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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