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1 Anatomy and Physiology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, USA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kenny{at}vet.ksu.edu.
Hypothermia produced by acute cooling prominently alters sympathetic nerve outflow. Skin sympathoexcitatory responses to skin cooling are attenuated in aged compared with young subjects, suggesting that advancing age influences sympathetic nerve responsiveness to hypothermia. However, regulation of skin SND is only one component of the complex sympathetic nerve response profile to hypothermia. Whether aging alters the responsiveness of sympathetic nerves innervating other targets during acute cooling is not known. In the present study, utilizing multifiber recordings of splenic, renal, and adrenal sympathetic nerve activity, we tested the hypothesis that hypothermia-induced changes in visceral SND would be attenuated in middle-aged and aged compared with young F344 rats. Colonic temperature (Tc) was progressively reduced from 38°C to 31°C in young (3-6 month-old), middle-aged (12-month-old), and aged (24-month-old) baroreceptor-innervated and sinoaortic-denervated (SAD), urethanechloralose anesthetized, Fischer 344 (F344 rats). The following observations were made. 1) Progressive hypothermia significantly (p<0.05) reduced splenic, renal, and adrenal SND in young baroreceptor-innervated F344 rats. 2) Reductions in splenic, renal, and adrenal SND to progressive hypothermia were less consistently observed, and when observed, were generally attenuated in baroreceptor-innervated middle-aged and aged compared with young F344 rats. 3) Differences in splenic, renal, and adrenal SND responses to reduced Tc were observed in SAD young, middle-aged, and aged F344 rats, suggesting that age-associated attenuations in SND responses to acute cooling are not the result of age-dependent modifications in arterial baroreflex regulation of SND. These findings demonstrate that advancing chronological age alters the regulation of visceral SND responses to progressive hypothermia, modifications that may contribute to the inability of aged individuals to adequately respond to acute bouts of hypothermia.
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