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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol (October 10, 2002). doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00416.2002
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Articles in PresS, published online ahead of print October 10, 2002
Am J Physiol Regu Physiol, 10.1152/ajpregu.00416.2002
Submitted on July 12, 2002
Accepted on October 8, 2002

Unstable heart rate and temperature regulation predict mortality in AKR/J mice

Clarke G Tankersley1*, Rafael Irizarry2, Susan E Flanders1, Richard Rabold1, and Robert Frank1

1 Environmental Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
2 Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: drclarke{at}jhmi.edu.

Elderly populations face greater risks of mortality when exposed to changes in environmental stress. The purpose of the following study was to develop an age-dependent susceptibility model that achieved the following three goals: 1) to operationally define homeostasis by assessing the stability and periodicity in physical activity, heart rate (HR) and deep-body temperature (Tdb), 2) to specify alterations in activity, HR and Tdb regulation that signal imminent death, and 3) to test the hypothesis that the decay in homeostasis associated with imminent death incorporates the coincident disintegration of multiple physiological systems. To achieve these goals, the circadian regulation of activity, HR and Tdb was assessed using radiotelemeters implanted in AKR/J (AK, n = 17) inbred mice at ~190 d of age. During a 12-h light/dark cycle, weekly measurements were obtained at 30-min intervals for 48-h periods until each animal's natural death. The average (± SEM) life span of surgically-treated animals did not differ from untreated controls (319 ± 12 vs. 319 ± 14 days). Cardiac and thermal stability were characterized by a circadian periodicity, which oscillated around stable daily averages of 640 ± 14 bpm in HR and 36.6 ± 0.1°C in Tdb. Stable HR and Tdb responses were compared to extreme conditions 3d prior to death during which a disintegration of circadian periodicity was coincident with a fall in the daily average HR and Tdb of ~29% and ~13% lower (i.e. 456 ± 22 bpm and 31.7 ± 0.6°C), respectively. The results further suggested that multiple predictors of cardiac and thermal instability in AK mice, including significant bradycardia, hypothermia and a loss of circadian periodicity, forecast life span 5-6 wks prior to expiration.




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