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1.
Selective brain cooling (SBC) is defined as the lowering of brain temperature below arterial blood temperature. Artiodactyls employ a carotid rete, an anatomical heat exchanger, to cool arterial blood shortly before it enters the brain. The survival advantage of this anatomy traditionally is believed to be a protection of brain tissue from heat injury, especially during exercise. Perissodactyls such as horses do not possess a carotid rete, and it has been proposed that their guttural pouches serve the heat-exchange function of the carotid rete by cooling the blood that traverses them, thus protecting the brain from heat injury. We have tested this proposal by measuring brain and carotid artery temperature simultaneously in free-living horses. We found that despite evidence of cranial cooling, brain temperature increased by about 2.5 degrees C during exercise, and consistently exceeded carotid temperature by 0.2-0.5 degrees C. We conclude that cerebral blood flow removes heat from the brain by convection, but since SBC does not occur in horses, the guttural pouches are not surrogate carotid retes.  相似文献   

2.
By cooling the hypothalamus during hyperthermia, selective brain cooling reduces the drive on evaporative heat loss effectors, in so doing saving body water. To investigate whether selective brain cooling was increased in dehydrated sheep, we measured brain and carotid arterial blood temperatures at 5-min intervals in nine female Dorper sheep (41 +/- 3 kg, means +/- SD). The animals, housed in a climatic chamber at 23 degrees C, were exposed for nine days to a cyclic protocol with daytime heat (40 degrees C for 6 h). Drinking water was removed on the 3rd day and returned 5 days later. After 4 days of water deprivation, sheep had lost 16 +/- 4% of body mass, and plasma osmolality had increased from 290 +/- 8 to 323 +/- 9 mmol/kg (P < 0.0001). Although carotid blood temperature increased during heat exposure to similar levels during euhydration and dehydration, selective brain cooling was significantly greater in dehydration (0.38 +/- 0.18 degrees C) than in euhydration (-0.05 +/- 0.14 degrees C, P = 0.0008). The threshold temperature for selective brain cooling was not significantly different during euhydration (39.27 degrees C) and dehydration (39.14 degrees C, P = 0.62). However, the mean slope of lines of regression of brain temperature on carotid blood temperature above the threshold was significantly lower in dehydrated animals (0.40 +/- 0.31) than in euhydrated animals (0.87 +/- 0.11, P = 0.003). Return of drinking water at 39 degrees C led to rapid cessation of selective brain cooling, and brain temperature exceeded carotid blood temperature throughout heat exposure on the following day. We conclude that for any given carotid blood temperature, dehydrated sheep exposed to heat exhibit selective brain cooling up to threefold greater than that when euhydrated.  相似文献   

3.
To test whether baboons are capable of implementing selective brain cooling, we measured, every 5 min, the temperature in their hypothalamus, carotid arterial bloodstream, and abdominal cavity. The baboons were unrestrained and exposed to 22 degrees C for 7 days and then to a cyclic environment with 15 degrees C at night and 35 degrees C during the day for a further 7 days. During the latter 7 days some of the baboons also were exposed to radiant heat during the day. For three days, during heat exposure, water was withheld. At no time was the hypothalamus cooler than carotid arterial blood, despite brain temperatures above 40 degrees C. With little variation, the hypothalamus was consistently 0.5 degrees C warmer than arterial blood. At high body temperatures, the hypothalamus was sometimes cooler than the abdomen. Abdominal temperature was more variable than arterial blood and tended to exceed arterial blood temperature at higher body temperatures. Hypothalamic temperature cooler than a warm abdomen is not evidence for selective brain cooling. In species that can implement selective brain cooling, the brain is most likely to be cooler than carotid arterial blood when an animal is hyperthermic, during heat exposure, and also dehydrated and undisturbed by human presence. When we exposed baboons to high ambient temperatures while they were water deprived and undisturbed, they never implemented selective brain cooling. We conclude that baboons cannot implement selective brain cooling and can find no convincing evidence that any primate species can do so.  相似文献   

4.
The roles of metabolic heat production, arterial blood flow and temperature in the genesis of the brain temperature increase related to REM sleep occurrence in several mammalian species are discussed on the basis of available experimental evidence. The experimental data show that only changes in arterial blood flow and temperature consistently underlie the rise in brain temperature in presence (cat) or absence (rabbit) of the carotid rete. The alteration of cardiovascular regulation in REM sleep is the remote cause of such rise. The proximate causes are decrease in carotid blood supply and increase in vertebral blood supply to the brain and related depression of systemic and selective brain cooling.  相似文献   

5.
To determine if rectal temperature is an adequate index of brain temperature during changing thermal conditions, we measured rectal, cerebral cortical, and carotid arterial blood temperatures simultaneously during whole body cooling in adult cats. The mean steady state rectal, brain and carotid arterial temperatures at the onset of cooling were: 39.2 +/- 0.2, 38.5 +/- 0.2, and 38.3 +/- 0.3 degrees C, respectively. Rectal temperature decreased faster than both brain and arterial blood, while only a small temperature difference was observed between brain and arterial blood, brain always exceeding blood. Rectal temperature cannot be considered an adequate index of brain temperature. Carotid arterial temperature is a better estimate of brain temperature.  相似文献   

6.
Selective brain cooling (SBC) is defined as a brain temperature cooler than the temperature of arterial blood from the trunk. Surrogate measures of arterial blood temperature have been used in many published studies on SBC. The use of a surrogate for arterial blood temperature has the potential to confound proper identification of SBC. We have measured brain, carotid blood, and rectal temperatures in conscious sheep exposed to 40, 22, and 5 degrees C. Rectal temperature was consistently higher than arterial blood temperature. Brain temperature was consistently cooler than rectal temperature during all exposures. Brain temperature only fell below carotid blood temperature during the final few hours of 40 degrees C exposure and not at all during the 5 degrees C exposure. Consequently, using rectal temperature as a surrogate for arterial blood temperature does not provide a reliable indication of the status of the SBC effector. We also show that rapid suppression of SBC can result if the animals are disturbed.  相似文献   

7.
Marsupials reportedly can implement selective brain cooling despite lacking a carotid rete. We measured brain (hypothalamic) and carotid arterial blood temperatures every 5 min for 5, 17, and 63 days in spring in three free-living western grey kangaroos. Body temperature was highest during the night, and decreased rapidly early in the morning, reaching a nadir at 10:00. The highest body temperatures recorded occurred sporadically in the afternoon, presumably associated with exercise. Hypothalamic temperature consistently exceeded arterial blood temperature, by an average 0.3°C, except during these afternoon events when hypothalamic temperature lagged behind, and was occasionally lower than, the simultaneous arterial blood temperature. The reversal in temperatures resulted from the thermal inertia of the brain; changes in the brain to arterial blood temperature difference were related to the rate of change of arterial blood temperature on both heating and cooling (P < 0.001 for all three kangaroos). We conclude that these data are not evidence for active selective brain cooling in kangaroos. The effect of thermal inertia on brain temperature is larger than might be expected in the grey kangaroo, a discrepancy that we speculate derives from the unique vascular anatomy of the marsupial brain.  相似文献   

8.
Adaptive heterothermy and selective brain cooling are regarded as important thermal adaptations of large arid-zone mammals. Adaptive heterothermy, a process which reduces evaporation by storing body heat, ought to be enhanced by ambient heat load and by water deficit, but most mammals studied fail to show at least one of those attributes. Selective brain cooling, the reduction of brain temperature below arterial blood temperature, is most evident in artiodactyls, which possess a carotid rete, and traditionally has been considered to protect the brain during hyperthermia. The development of miniature ambulatory data loggers for recording body temperature allows the temperatures of free-living wild mammals to be measured in their natural habitats. All the African ungulates studied so far, in their natural habitats, do not exhibit adaptive heterothermy. They have low-amplitude nychthemeral rhythms of temperature, with mean body temperature over the night exceeding that over the day. Those with carotid retes (black wildebeest, springbok, eland) employ selective brain cooling but zebra, without a rete, do not. None of the rete ungulates, however, seems to employ selective brain cooling to prevent the brain overheating during exertional hyperthermia. Rather, they use it at rest, under moderate heat load, we believe in order to switch body heat loss from evaporative to non-evaporative routes.  相似文献   

9.
1. Each half rete from five Boer goats was perfused with water at 38 °C and flow rate of 2 ml min−1 while simultaneously perfusing the cavernous sinus with water at different temperatures and flow combinations and recording temperatures across the rete.

2. The minimum temperature difference across the rete was recorded at a cavernous sinus perfusion temperature of 37.8 °C and flow rate of 2 ml min−1.

3. Slopes of heat exchange increased threefold when the flow was increased four times.

4. These results support the idea that the rete is an obligate heat exchanger.

Keywords: Carotid rete; Selective brain cooling; Thermoregulation; Artiodactyls; Cavernous sinus  相似文献   


10.
In artiodactyls, arterial blood destined for the brain can be cooled through counter-current heat exchange within the cavernous sinus via a process called selective brain cooling. We test the hypothesis that selective brain cooling, which results in lowered hypothalamic temperature, contributes to water conservation in sheep. Nine Dorper sheep, instrumented to provide measurements of carotid blood and brain temperature, were dosed with deuterium oxide (D2O), exposed to heat for 8 days (40◦C for 6-h per day) and deprived of water for the last five days (days 3 to 8). Plasma osmolality increased and the body water fraction decreased over the five days of water deprivation, with the sheep losing 16.7% of their body mass. Following water deprivation, both the mean 24h carotid blood temperature and the mean 24h brain temperature increased, but carotid blood temperature increased more than did brain temperature resulting in increased selective brain cooling. There was considerable inter-individual variation in the degree to which individual sheep used selective brain cooling. In general, sheep spent more time using selective brain cooling, and it was of greater magnitude, when dehydrated compared to when they were euhydrated. We found a significant positive correlation between selective brain cooling magnitude and osmolality (an index of hydration state). Both the magnitude of selective brain cooling and the proportion of time that sheep spent selective brain cooling were negatively correlated with water turnover. Sheep that used selective brain cooling more frequently, and with greater magnitude, lost less water than did conspecifics using selective brain cooling less efficiently. Our results show that a 50kg sheep can save 2.6L of water per day (~60% of daily water intake) when it employs selective brain cooling for 50% of the day during heat exposure. We conclude that selective brain cooling has a water conservation function in artiodactyls.  相似文献   

11.
We constructed and used a mathematical model of maternal-fetal heat exchange in the sheep to explore the effects of changes in certain parameters on steady-state fetal temperatures and to determine whether the fetus in the model has any potential to control its own temperature. The model took into account both fetal and placental heat production and exchange of heat in the placenta, across the fetal skin, via amniotic fluid, and through the uterine wall. The maternal ewe was assumed to be a constant temperature heat sink. Changes in placental or fetal heat production were calculated to change the ratio of heat exiting across the placenta or fetal skin significantly but to have little effect on fetal core temperature, e.g., a rise of only 0.8 degrees C was predicted after a twofold increase in fetal heat production. Fetal placental blood flow was calculated to affect fetal temperature the most of any flow, a reduction to zero causing fetal temperature to rise 5.0 degrees C. Changes in heat conductances between fetal skin and amniotic fluid, or between amniotic fluid and uterine wall, had minimal effect on fetal temperature. From the model calculations here and because heat exchange within the sheep placenta has previously been calculated to be extremely efficient, we conclude that the fetal sheep has little ability to control its temperature by changes in heat dissipated through extraplacental pathways. Thus the model predicts an effective heat clamp that closely links fetal to maternal temperature.  相似文献   

12.
 A vascular heat transfer model is developed to simulate temperature decay along the carotid arteries in humans, and thus, to evaluate temperature differences between the body core and arterial blood supplied to the brain. Included are several factors, including the local blood perfusion rate, blood vessel bifurcation in the neck, and blood vessel pairs on both sides of the neck. The potential for cooling blood in the carotid artery by countercurrent heat exchange with the jugular veins and by radial heat conduction to the neck surface was estimated. Cooling along the common and internal carotid arteries was calculated to be up to 0.87 °C during hyperthermia by high environmental temperatures or muscular exercise. This model was also used to evaluate the feasibility of lowering the brain temperature effectively by placing ice pads on the neck and head surface or by wearing cooling garments during hypothermia treatment for brain injury or other medical conditions. It was found that a 1.1 °C temperature drop along the carotid arteries is possible when the neck surface is cooled to 0 °C. Thus, the body core temperature may not be a good indication of the brain temperature during hyperthermia or hypothermia. Received: 10 January 2002 / Accepted: 7 May 2002 This research was supported by a UMBC Summer Faculty Fellowship.  相似文献   

13.
This is a study on the effect of cooling and heating amniotic fluid on blood flow to fetal tissues and organs. In 8 unanaesthetized, chronically-catheterised fetal sheep (129-137 days gestation) cold or warm water was passed through tubing encircling the fetus in utero and blood flow was measured using the radionuclide-labelled 15 mu spheres. Following cooling for 30 min, amniotic fluid temperature fell 9.6 degrees C to 29.9 +/- 2.1 degrees C (SEM) fetal arterial temperature fell 2.37 degrees C to 37.30 +/- 0.36, and maternal arterial temperature fell 0.53 degrees C to 38.58 +/- 0.16. Blood flow through the fetal skin fell 60% (P less than 0.01) to 13.6 ml/min per 100 g tissue. Blood flow to the brown fat increased 186% (P less than 0.05) to 99.6 ml/min per 100 g. Following warming for 20 min, fetal temperature rose to 40.43 +/- 0.19 degrees C, and skin blood flow did not change significantly relative to initial control period but rose 200% above that during cooling (P less than 0.01). During both cooling and heating, blood flow to the adrenals rose significantly (P less than 0.05) whereas flow to the carcass, brain, kidneys, and placenta was not altered detectably. Continuous sampling of blood from the inferior vena cava during microsphere injection failed to detect any evidence of arterio-venous shunting through the skin at any temperature studied. Overall, the blood flow responses are consistent with a thermoregulatory role for the skin and brown fat in the near-term fetal sheep.  相似文献   

14.
Absorption of power in large body volumes can occur with some approaches used for hyperthermia treatment of cancer. A systemic heat absorption rate exceeding the heat dissipation rate can lead to systemic temperature elevation that limits the magnitude and duration of application of power and hence the degree of preferential tumor temperature rise. We describe a hyperthermia approach consisting of regional electromagnetic power absorption and extracorporeal blood cooling with regulation of both systemic heat absorption and dissipation rates ("balanced heat transfer"). A test of this approach in five dogs with nonperfused tumor models demonstrated intratumoral temperatures greater than 42 degrees C, while systemic temperature remained at 33 degrees C and visceral temperatures within the heated region equilibrated between 33 and 42 degrees C. Solutions of the bioheat transfer equation were obtained for a simplified model with a tumor perfusion rate lower than surrounding normal tissue perfusion rate. In this model, the use of arterial blood temperatures less than 37 degrees C allowed higher power densities to be used, for given normal tissue temperatures, than when arterial temperature was greater than or equal to 37 degrees C. As a result, higher intratumoral temperatures were predicted. Control of arterial blood temperature using extracorporeal cooling may thus (1) limit systemic temperature rise produced by regional heating devices and (2) offer a means of improving intratumoral temperature elevations.  相似文献   

15.
Temperatures in the brain and eyes of mako and porbeagle sharks (Lamnidae) are 5 degrees C warmer than the water while the brain and eye temperatures in six other species of pelagic sharks are within 0.1 degrees C of water temperature. An orbital rete mirabile is present in the porbeagle and mako sharks but absent in the cranial vasculature of eleven other species of pelagic sharks. The orbital rete in the head of the porbeagle and mako sharks acts as a heat exchanger which conserves metabolic heat and raises the local tissue temperatures. This brain and eye warming system should buffer the central nervous system from the effects of rapid temperature change. Warming of the retina may improve the visual sensitivity of these active predators.  相似文献   

16.
Despite substantial knowledge on thermoregulation in reptiles, the mechanisms involved in heat exchange of sea turtles have not been investigated in detail. We studied blood flow in the front flippers of two green turtles, Chelonia mydas, and four loggerhead turtles, Caretta caretta, using Doppler ultrasound to assess the importance of regional blood flow in temperature regulation. Mean blood flow velocity and heart rate were determined for the water temperature at which the turtles were acclimated (19.3 degrees-22.5 degrees C) and for several experimental water temperatures (17 degrees-32 degrees C) to which the turtles were exposed for a short time. Flipper circulation increased with increasing water temperature, whereas during cooling, flipper circulation was greatly reduced. Heart rate was also positively correlated with water temperature; however, there were large variations between individual heart rate responses. Body temperatures, which were additionally determined for the two green turtles and six loggerhead turtles, increased faster during heating than during cooling. Heating rates were positively correlated with the difference between acclimation and experimental temperature and negatively correlated with body mass. Our data suggest that by varying circulation of the front flippers, turtles are capable of either transporting heat quickly into the body or retaining heat inside the body, depending on the prevailing thermal demands.  相似文献   

17.
In posthatching mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos), brain cooling improves with growth. To determine whether this may be correlated with growth-related changes in morphology of the rete ophthalmicum, we studied the development of this rete in immature mallards from hatching to 29 days of age. We found that the number of arteries and veins was fixed at hatching. The rete continued to grow, however, in length and vessel diameter during body and brain growth. The vascular surface area for heat exchange in the rete therefore also increased with body and brain mass. The increase in retial heat-exchange area was faster than the simultaneous increase in brain mass. The increase in body-to-brain temperature difference (delta T) described previously occurred nearly in direct proportion to heat-exchange area, such that the ratio of delta T to exchange area was nearly constant at about 0.1 degrees C per mm2 during growth. It is concluded that the increase in heat-exchange area of the rete ophthalmicum plays a major role in the development of brain cooling capacity of posthatching ducks.  相似文献   

18.
There are systemic and selective mechanisms for brain cooling in mammals. The difference between the temperatures of the vertebral and the carotid blood perfusing the brain is determined by selective heat loss and is, therefore, a quantitative indicator of the intensity of selective brain cooling. Across the wake-sleep cycle systemic and selective brain cooling are affected by state-dependent autonomic changes. In REM sleep selective brain cooling is impaired.  相似文献   

19.
An influence of brain and trunk temperatures controlled independently of each other by means of artificial heat exchangers, on the intensity of natural selective brain cooling (SBC) was studied in 6 conscious goats. Intensity of SBC was markedly enhanced by increasing brain temperature. On the other hand, a rise of trunk temperature with the cerebral temperature clamped at 39 degrees C or 40 degrees C, reduced SBC intensity in spite of a simultaneous increase in the respiratory evaporative heat loss. When brain temperature was clamped at 41 degrees C, the magnitude of SBC was essentially independent of trunk temperature. These results suggest that during hyperthermia a competition exists between trunk and brain for cool nasal blood.  相似文献   

20.
Summary In conscious Pekin ducks, carotid and sciatic blood flows, respiratory rate, core and skin temperatures were measured during selective thermal stimulations of the spinal cord and rostral brain stem in thermoneutral (20 °C) and warm (32 °C) ambient conditions.At thermoneutral ambient temperature selective heating of the spinal cord by 2–3 °C (to 43–44 °C) increased the carotid blood flow by 138% and the sciatic blood flow by 46%. Increase in blood flows was correlated with increased breathing rate and beak and web skin temperatures.Selective cooling of the spinal cord at warm ambient temperatures and panting reduced the blood flow in both arteries and decreased the breathing rate.Heating or cooling of the brain stem showed generally very weak but otherwise similar responses as thermal stimulation of the spinal cord. In one duck out of six there was a marked effect on regional blood flow during brain stimulation.The results show that thermal stimulation of the spinal cord exerts a marked influence on regional blood flow important in thermoregulation, whereas the lower brain stem shows only a weak thermosensitivity, and stimulation caused only small cardiovascular changes of no major consequence in thermoregulation.  相似文献   

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