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1.
This study investigates how metabolic rate, as required for thermoregulation, interacts with breathing control during development of the lamb. Fifteen lambs were studied sequentially at 4, 14, 30, 45 and 55 days of age. During each study they were maintained at ambient temperatures of 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 degrees C for at least 1 h before measurements were made during N-REM sleep. Basal oxygen consumption fell from 16.1 +/- 0.72 (+/- SEM) to 10.1 +/- 0.47 ml/min per kg between 4 and 55 days of age, while breathing frequencies fell from 52.3 +/- 4.4 to 32.4 +/- 1.6 breaths/min over this period. Ventilation increased as oxygen consumption increased on cooling below thermoneutrality. In 4 days-old lambs this was achieved by an increase in breath amplitude, whilst in older lambs breathing frequency also rose. As breathing frequency fell there was a greater incidence of expiratory laryngeal braking at thermoneutrality associated with lengthened expiratory time. The ambient temperature at which these effects occurred, together with panting thresholds, progressively changed with age as the upper and lower critical temperatures fell and the thermoneutral range widened during development. It is concluded that metabolic rate provides a powerful stimulus to breathing in infant lambs. As the metabolic stimulus decreases with age, basal breathing frequency falls and expiratory laryngeal braking becomes important not only to protect lung volume, but also, through airway mechanosensory reflexes, in regulating breath time. This interaction is also particularly apparent as the metabolic and respiratory requirements alter to meet changes in ambient conditions.  相似文献   

2.
This study investigates the role of metabolic rate and of vagal airway mechanisms in sustaining rhythmic breathing in the developing lamb. Fifteen lambs were prepared, at 2 days of age under fluothane anaesthesia, for sequential studies at 4, 14, 30, 45, and 55 days of age. At each age they were maintained at an ambient temperature of 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 degrees C for at least one hour before measurements were made during N-REM sleep. In 6 lambs at 4 days and in all lambs at older ages the upper airway was by-passed (by opening a tracheal window) for 10-15 minutes at each ambient temperature. Oxygen consumption was unaffected by upper airway by-pass and there were no consistent changes in mean breathing frequency or amplitude, with the exception of shifts to panting at warm ambient temperatures. Breathing pattern was unaffected by upper airway by-pass in lambs at 4 days of age, but at older ages loss of regularity of breathing frequently occurred (up to 47% of 30 days-old lambs at 25 degrees C). This was related to the fall in oxygen consumption with age and to basal values at thermoneutrality, and coincided with lower respiratory rates and increased use of expiratory laryngeal braking. Periodic breathing (and apnea) of a fixed cycle length (9.3 +/- 0.36 s) was a common feature (62%) of the observed breathing dysrhythmia. In young lambs high metabolic rate sustained high frequency rhythmic breathing which was unaffected by upper airway by-pass.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Experiments were done on seven lambs between the ages of 10 and 24 days to investigate the effects of sleep on the cardiovascular and metabolic responses to a decrease in ambient temperature. Each lamb was anesthetized and instrumented for recordings of electrocorticogram, electro-oculogram, and nuchal electromyograms and measurements of cardiac output, systemic and pulmonic pressures and hemoglobin oxygen saturations as well as body core temperature. No sooner than three days after surgery, measurements were made during periods of quiet wakefulness, quiet sleep and active sleep at ambient temperatures of 25 degrees C and 18 degrees C. Decreasing the environmental temperature from 25 degrees C to 18 degrees C elicited a similar thermogenic response during quiet wakefulness, quiet sleep and active sleep as evidenced by an increase in total body oxygen consumption. The increased metabolic oxygen demand was met by an increase in systemic oxygen transport as well as by an increase in total body oxygen extraction. Since shivering was absent during active sleep, it is likely that nonshivering thermogenesis played a major role in the metabolic response. Our data provide evidence that sleep does not significantly alter the cardiovascular and metabolic responses to a modest decrease in ambient temperature in young lambs.  相似文献   

4.
Experiments were done on ten lambs ranging in age from 15 to 25 days to define the temperature, metabolic and cardiorespiratory responses to intravenous administration of a small dose of bacterial pyrogen (SAE). Administration of SAE but not normal saline produced a short-lived fever of about 0.7 degrees C. The increase in body-core temperature was preceded by a surge in total body oxygen consumption and the onset of shivering which was influenced by behavioral state (ie, shivering was inhibited during active sleep). The increase in total body oxygen consumption was initially met by an increase in total body oxygen extraction and then by an increase in systemic oxygen delivery. Systemic arterial blood pressure did not change significantly during the febrile response; however, pulmonic arterial blood pressure increased significantly. Thus, our experiments provide new data on oxygen supply and demand during the development of fever and that shivering thermogenesis is inhibited in active sleep following the administration of bacterial pyrogen in young lambs. The influence of active sleep on the overall febrile response, and whether or not there is a shift from shivering thermogenesis to non-shivering thermogenesis remains to be determined.  相似文献   

5.
Aerobic metabolism (oxygen consumption, VO2, and carbon dioxide production, VCO2) has been measured in newborn rats at 2 days of age during normoxia, 30 min of hyperoxia (100% O2) and an additional 30 min of recovery in normoxia at ambient temperatures of 35 degrees C (thermoneutrality) or 30 degrees C. In normoxia, at 30 degrees C VO2 was higher than at 35 degrees C. With hyperoxia, VO2 increased in all cases, but more so at 30 degrees C (+20%) than at 35 degrees C (+9%). Upon return to normoxia, metabolism readily returned to the prehyperoxic value. The results support the concept that the normoxic metabolic rate of the newborn can be limited by the availability of oxygen. At temperatures below thermoneutrality the higher metabolic needs aggravate the limitation in oxygen availability, and the positive effects of hyperoxia on VO2 are therefore more apparent.  相似文献   

6.
Heat-acclimated rats show lighter IBAT deposit with different gross composition and lower GDP-binding than controls at thermoneutrality. A thermal disactivation of the tissue is then inferred. Cafeteria regime increased IBAT mass and GDP-binding when offered to rats at a thermoneutral ambient temperature. These results indicate that BAT thermogenesis at thermoneutrality is not the lowest one of the tissue and that diet-induced thermogenesis can take place even at thermoneutrality.  相似文献   

7.
Nonshivering thermogenesis is normally inactive in utero but increases with supplemental oxygenation and again after occlusion of the umbilical cord. To test the hypothesis that brown fat responses are triggered by the surge in triiodothyronine (T3) which occurs at birth, we studied 7 fetal sheep at 132-143 days gestation. Fetuses were first cooled 2-3 degrees C by circulating cold water through an external coil in the amniotic fluid and then ventilated with oxygen in utero to raise arterial PO2 to 109 +/- 10 (SEM) mmHg. An hour later T3 was infused intravenously to elevate and maintain plasma levels at 39.8 +/- 6.1 nmol/l, some 40-50 times basal levels. Indices of brown heat production did not rise during the next 30 min. Following snaring of the umbilical cord, however, plasma free fatty acid levels increased 400% to 423 +/- 91 mEq/l, plasma glycerol rose 350% to 766 +/- 168 mmol/1, and the temperature difference between brown fat and body core widened to 0.59 +/- 0.13 degrees C during the next 30 min. Whole body oxygen consumption peaked at 23.1 +/- 2.8 ml.min-1.kg-1 body weight. These responses to cord occlusion were similar with and without T3 administration. Changes in plasma catecholamines during these experiments did not correlate with the onset of nonshivering thermogenesis. We conclude that the rise in T3 or the changes in plasma catecholamines which occurs at birth are not causally related to the onset of nonshivering thermogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
1. Resting metabolic rate and body temperature in function of ambient temperature were determined for two species of Ctenomys. 2. Oxygen consumption was lowest between 25 and 30 degrees C and was 0.946 +/- 0.030 and 0.968 +/- 0.022 in Ctenomys talarum (from Mar de Cobo and Necochea, respectively). Resting metabolic rate was 0.343 +/- 0.053 at 30 C in C. australis. 3. Mean rectal temperature at thermoneutrality was 36.1 +/- 0.13 and 37.3 +/- 0.17 in C. talarum and C. australis, respectively. 4. Limited thermoregulation occurred in C. talarum down to 20 degrees C but C. australis maintained body temperature down to 10 degrees C. 5. Both species of tuco-tucos became hyperthermic at ambient temperatures above thermoneutrality.  相似文献   

9.
1. To determine whether long-term cold exposure induces insulative adaptation in the rat, two groups of eight adult animals each were exposed to 4 and 25 degrees C, respectively, for 18 months. 2. At any ambient temperature between -5 and 30 degrees C, the cold adapted animals had a higher rate of oxygen uptake, and higher unfurred skin temperatures than the controls. 3. At ambient temperatures below thermoneutrality, whole body thermal resistance increased continuously in both groups of animals. 4. It is concluded that long-term exposure does not induce insulative adaptation, and that thermal resistance is not maximal at the lower critical temperature.  相似文献   

10.
Oxygen consumption rates were measured in chicks (0–7 days of age), and in non-brooding and brooding adults. Brooded chicks maintained a constant oxygen consumption rate at a chamber ambient temperature of 10–35°C (0–5 days of age: 2.95ml O2·g-1·h-1 and 6–17 days of age: 5.80 ml O2·g-1·h-1) while unbrooded chicks increased oxygen consumption rate at ambient temperature below 30°C to double the brooded oxygen consumption rate at 25 and 15°C for chicks < 5 days of age and>5 days of age, respectively. The massspecific oxygen consumption rate of breeding male and females (non-brooding) were significantly elevated within the thermoneutral zone thermal neutral zone (28–35°C) in comparison to non-breeding adults. Below the thermal neutral zone, oxygen consumption rate was not significantly different. The elevation in oxygen consumption rate of breeding quail was not correlated with the presence of broodpatches, which developed only in females, but is a seasonal adjustment in metabolism. Male and females that actively brooded one to five chicks had significantly higher oxygen consumption rate than non-brooding quail at ambient temperature below 30°C. Brooding oxygen consumption rate was constant during day and night, indicating a temporary suppression of the circadian rhythm of metabolism. Brooding oxygen consumption rate increased significantly with brood number, but neither adult body mass nor adult sex were significant factors in the relationship between brooding oxygen consumption rate and ambient temperature. The proportion of daylight hours that chicks were brooded by parents was negatively correlated with ambient temperature. After chicks were 5 days old brooding time was reduced but brooding oxygen consumption rate was unchanged. Heat from the brooding parent appeared to originate mainly from the apteria under the wings and legs rather than the broodpatch. The parental heat contribution to chick temperature regulation below the chicks' thermal neutral zone is achieved by increasing parental thermal conductance by a feedback control similar to that suggested for the control of egg temperature via the brood-patch. It is concluded that the brooding period is an energetic burden to parent quail, and the magnitude of the cost increases directly with brood number and inversely with ambient temperature during this period. The oxygen consumption rate of brooding parents was 5.80–6.90 ml O2·g-1·h-1 (ambient temperature 10–15°C) at night and up to 5.10 ml O2·g-1·h-1 (ambient temperature 18°C) during the day, which are 100 and 40% higher than non-brooding birds, respectively.Abbreviations bm body mass - SMR standard metabolic rate - T a ambient temperature - T b body temperature - I/O2 oxygen consumption rate - C wet wet thermal conductance - TNZ thermal neutral zone - ANOVA analysis of variance - ANCOVA analysis of covariance  相似文献   

11.
Noradrenaline (10 microgram) injected into the lateral cerebral ventricle of guinea pigs aged 2 to 12 days produced a rapid increase in oxygen consumption and in colonic temperature at an ambient temperature of 30 degrees C. The increase was most pronounced in the youngest animals and decreased with advancing age, but was still significant at 12 days of age. Species differences and the role of ambient temperature in the responses are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) deficient (-/-) mice develop mature onset obesity. Pharmacological studies have shown that IL-6 has direct lipolytic effects and when administered centrally increases sympathetic outflow. However, the metabolic functions of endogenous IL-6 are not fully elucidated. We aimed to investigate the effect of IL-6 deficiency with respect to cold exposure and cage-switch stress, that is, situations that normally increase sympathetic outflow. Energy metabolism, core temperature, heart rate, and activity were investigated in young preobese IL-6-/- mice by indirect calorimetry together with telemetry. Baseline measurements and the effect of cage-switch stress were investigated at thermoneutrality (30 degrees C) and at room temperature (20 degrees C). The effect of cold exposure was investigated at 4 degrees C. At 30 degrees C, the basal core temperature was 0.6 +/- 0.24 degrees C lower in IL-6-/- compared with wild-type mice, whereas the oxygen consumption did not differ significantly. The respiratory exchange ratio at 20 degrees C was significantly higher and the calculated fat utilization rate was lower in IL-6-/- mice. In response to cage-switch stress, the increase in oxygen consumption at both 30 and 20 degrees C was lower in IL-6-/- than in wild-type mice. The increase in heart rate was lower in IL-6-/- mice at 30 degrees C. At 4 degrees C, both the oxygen consumption and core temperature were lower in IL-6-/- compared with wild-type mice, suggesting a lower cold-induced thermogenesis in IL-6-/- mice. The present results indicate that endogenous IL-6 is of importance for stress- and cold-induced energy expenditure in mice.  相似文献   

13.
The oxygen consumption of European finches, the siskin (Carduelis spinus), the brambling (Fringilla montifringilla), the bullfinch (Pyrhulla pyrhulla), the greenfinch (Carduelis chloris) and the hawfinch (Coccothraustes coccothraustes), was recorded continuously while ambient temperature was decreased stepwise from +30 down to-75°C. The oxygen consumption, body temperature (telemetrically), and shivering (integrated pectoral electromyography) of greenfinches were measured simultaneously at ambient temperatures between +30 and-75°C. Maximum heat production, cold limit, lower critical temperature, basal metabolic rate and thermal conductance (of the greenfinch) were determined. The diurnal variation of oxygen consumption of siskins and greenfinches was recorded at thermoneutrality and below the thermoneutral zone in winter- and summer-acclimatized birds. The diurnal variation of body temperature and thermal conductance of greenfinches were also determined. The diurnal variation of heat production was not seasonal or temperature dependent in the siskin and in the greenfinch. Nocturnal reduction of oxygen consumption saved 15–33% energy in the siskin and greenfinch. Body temperature of the greenfinch was lowered by 2.5–3.4°C. The nocturnal reduction of thermal conductance in the greenfinch was 39–48%. The basal metabolic rate was lowest in the largest bird (hawfinch) and highest in the smallest bird (siskin). The values were in the expected range. The heat production capacity of finches in winter was 4.7 times basal metabolic rate in the siskin, 4.2 times in the brambling, 3.5 times in the greenfinch and 2.9 times in the bullfinch and hawfinch. The heat production capacity of the siskin and greenfinch was not significantly lower in summer. The cold limit temperatures (°C) in winter were-61.2 in the siskin,-41.3 in the greenfinch,-37.0 in the bullfinch,-35.7 in the brambling and-28.9 in the hawfinch. The cold limit was 14.3°C higher in summer than in winter in the siskin and 8.7°C in the greenfinch. Thermal insulation of the greenfinch was significantly better in winter than in summer. The shivering of the greenfinch increased linearly when ambient temperature was decreased down to-40°C. Maintenance of shivering was coincident with season. In severe cold integrated pectoral electromyography did not correlate with oxygen consumption as expected. The possible existence of non-shivering thermogenesis in birds is discussed. It is concluded that the acclimatization of European finches is primarily metabolic and only secondly affected by insulation.Abbreviations AAT avian adipose tissue - bm body mass - BMR basal metabolic rate - C t thermal conductance - EMG electromyogram - HP heat production - HP max maximum heat production - MR metabolic rate - NST non-shivering thermogenesis - RMR resting metabolic rate - RQ respiratory quotient - T a ambient temperature - T b body temperature - T c colonic temperature - T 1c lower critical temperature - TNZ thermoneutral zone - T st shivering threshold temperature - V oxygen consumption  相似文献   

14.
It has been suggested that fenfluramine, a clinically used appetite suppressant, can also promote weight loss by augmenting energy expenditure, as indicated by increased whole-body O2 consumption (VO2) and mitochondrial GDP binding in brown adipose tissue (BAT) of fenfluramine-treated rats. To further investigate a possible involvement of BAT in the drug's metabolic effects, 113Sn-labelled microspheres were injected into the left cardiac ventricle of conscious rats 70-80 min after intraperitoneal delivery of 20 mg/kg fenfluramine (DL-mixture) or saline vehicle. At 28 degrees C ambient temperature, fenfluramine augmented resting whole-body VO2 and increased the microsphere entrapment in BAT, indicating enhanced blood flow and metabolism. At 20 degrees C ambient temperature, the expected increase in BAT blood flow associated with nonshivering thermogenesis was observed in control rats, but in fenfluramine-treated rats the increase in BAT blood flow was severely attenuated, and VO2 and body temperature were reduced. The stimulatory effect of fenfluramine on BAT metabolism was not prevented by urethane anesthesia but did not occur if the tissue was denervated. These blood flow measurements corroborate previous reports, based on GDP-binding assays, that fenfluramine treatment can augment thermogenesis in BAT by effects mediated through the innervation of the tissue. However, the data also indicate that this calorigenic effect is dependent on ambient temperature being near thermoneutrality and that in a cool environment the drug inhibits BAT thermogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
甲状腺激素对白头鹎基础产热的影响   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
甲状腺激素对动物的基础产热有调节作用,甲状腺活性的增加往往与基础代谢的增加相伴行。通过每日饲喂甲状腺素(T4)研究了甲状腺机能亢进对白头鹎(Pycnonotus sinensis)代谢产热的影响。代谢率的测定采用封闭式流体压力呼吸计测定,细胞色素C氧化酶(COX)采用铂氧电极-溶氧仪测定,反应温度为30℃,肝脏和肌肉的线粒体状态4呼吸采用铂氧电极-溶氧仪测定,反应温度为30℃,线粒体蛋白的测定以牛血清蛋白作为标准,采用Folin-phenol方法,测定肝脏和肌肉组织的蛋白质含量。与对照组相比,甲亢组的基础代谢率(BMR)明显升高;肝脏及肌肉组织状态4呼吸增加;肝脏和肌肉线粒体的COX活力升高。  相似文献   

16.
Plasma FSH and LH in prepubertal Booroola ewe lambs   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Basal plasma concentrations (four 30-min samples) and GnRH-induced release of gonadotrophins were measured every 15 days between 30 and 90 days and at 110 days of age in Merino ewe lambs from the prolific Booroola ('B') flock (n = 18-23), the medium prolificacy ('T') flock (n = 14-20), and the 'O' flock (n = 4-8) of low prolificacy. At ages of 30 and 45 days B ewe lambs had mean basal plasma FSH concentrations of 145 and 122 ng/ml which were significantly higher (P less than 0.01) than those seen in T (45 and 53 ng/ml), and O (39 and 38 ng/ml) flock ewes. Between 60 and 110 days of age there were no significant differences between genotypes. The increment in FSH concentrations above basal levels induced by the subcutaneous injection of 100 micrograms synthetic GnRH was only significantly (P less than 0.05) greater in B than T and O genotype ewe lambs at 110 days of age but not at other ages. The basal plasma FSH differences between the B, T and O genotypes at 30 and 45 days of age were not consistently related to the size of litter in which lambs were born. At 30 days of age the mean plasma LH concentration of B, T, and O flock lambs were 2.6 +/- 0.5, 1.2 +/- 0.6 and 0.7 +/- 0.8 ng/ml respectively. These differences were not significant. At later ages there were also no significant differences between the genotypes with respect to basal LH, and the increase in LH induced by exogenous GnRH was always similar for the three genotypes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The role of insulin in norepinephrine turnover (NE) and thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue (BAT) after acute cold-exposure was studied using streptozocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats. NE turnover was estimated by the NE synthesis inhibition technique with alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine. BAT thermogenesis was estimated by measuring mitochondrial guanosine-5'-diphosphate (GDP), cytochrome oxidase activity and mitochondrial oxygen consumption in BAT at an ambient temperature of 22 degrees C and during a six-hour cold-exposure at 4 degrees C. In insulin-deficient diabetic rats, the NE turnover, mitochondrial GDP binding, cytochrome oxidase activity and mitochondrial oxygen consumption in BAT at 22 degrees C were significantly reduced, compared with those of control rats. Treatment of STZ-induced diabetic rats with insulin prevented a decrease in NE turnover and BAT thermogenesis. Acute cold-exposure increased the NE turnover of BAT in insulin-deficient diabetic rats. The BAT thermogenic response to acute cold-exposure, however, did not occur in insulin-deficient diabetic rats. These results suggest that insulin is not essential in potentiating NE turnover in BAT after acute cold-exposure, but is required for cold-induced thermogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
It is colloquially stated that body size plays a role in the human response to cold, but the magnitude and details of this interaction are unclear. To explore the inherent influence of body size on cold-exposed metabolism, we investigated the relation between body composition and resting metabolic rate in humans at thermoneutrality and during cooling within the nonshivering thermogenesis range. Body composition and resting energy expenditure were measured in 20 lean and 20 overweight men at thermoneutrality and during individualized cold exposure. Metabolic rates as a function of ambient temperature were investigated considering the variability in body mass and composition. We observed an inverse relationship between body size and the lower critical temperature (LCT), i.e. the threshold where thermoneutrality ends and cold activates thermogenesis. LCT was higher in lean than overweight subjects (22.1 ± 0.6 vs 19.5 ± 0.5 °C, p < 0.001). Below LCT, minimum conductance was identical between lean and overweight (100 ± 4 vs 97 ± 3 kcal/°C/day respectively, p = 0.45). Overweight individuals had higher basal metabolic rate (BMR) explained mostly by the higher lean mass, and lower cold-induced thermogenesis (CIT) per degree of cold exposure. Below thermoneutrality, energy expenditure did not scale to lean body mass. Overweight subjects had lower heat loss per body surface area (44.7 ± 1.3 vs 54.7 ± 2.3 kcal/°C/m2/day, p < 0.001). We conclude that larger body sizes possessed reduced LCT as explained by higher BMR related to more lean mass rather than a change in whole-body conductance. Thus, larger individuals with higher lean mass need to be exposed to colder temperatures to activate CIT, not because of increased insulation, but because of a higher basal heat generation. Our study suggests that the distinct effects of body size and composition on energy expenditure should be taken in account when exploring the metabolism of humans exposed to cold.  相似文献   

19.
Experiments were carried out to determine the role of nitric oxide in mediating autonomic and behavioral thermoregulatory control in rat pups on postnatal days 1-2, 5-6, and 10-11. For an experiment, each pup received a subcutaneous injection of vehicle, NG-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester (D-NAME; 100 mg/kg), or NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; 100 mg/kg) before being placed in a metabolic chamber or in a thermocline with a linear temperature gradient of 23 to 43 degrees C. In the metabolic chamber, oxygen consumption and core temperature were measured as ambient temperature was decreased from 40 to 15 degrees C over a 60-min period. Decreasing ambient temperature elicited an increase in oxygen consumption in all age groups that received vehicle or d-NAME. The lower critical temperature and peak oxygen consumption upon exposure to cold after vehicle were 41 +/- 10 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) at 30 degrees C, 43 +/- 12 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) at 28 degrees C, and 55 +/- 11 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) at 25 degrees C in the 1- to 2-, 5- to 6-, and 10- to 11-day-old pups, respectively. Administration of L-NAME abolished the oxygen consumption response to cold in the 1- to 2- and 5- to 6-day-old pups and significantly attenuated the oxygen consumption response to cold in the 10- to 11-day-old pups. Selected ambient temperature in the thermocline was not significantly affected by prior administration of D-NAME or L-NAME compared with vehicle. Thus our data provide evidence that the nitric oxide system plays a role in mediating autonomic but not behavioral thermoregulatory control in rat pups during early postnatal maturation.  相似文献   

20.
Thermoregulatory capacities of 51 reindeer calves (Rangifer tarandus tarandus L.) aged 1-35 days were studied at -26.5 to +35.0 degrees C ambient temperatures at Kaamanen reindeer research station, Finland (69 degrees 10' N) during calving periods in May 1981 and May-July 1982. The newborn calves aged 1-4 days maintained a high body temperature (Tre) (mean +40.2 degrees C) even at the lowest experimental temperature of -22.5 degrees C by increasing their metabolic rate five-fold above the level at +11.0 degrees C. Heat production of the new-born calves was largely based on the metabolism of brown adipose tissue, stimulated by cold-induced discharge of the sympathetic nervous transmitter, noradrenaline (NA). Sensitivity of the calves to exogenous NA disappeared during the first 3-4 weeks of life. Thermal conductance of the calves was low at low ambient temperatures, but rose strongly as Ta increased above +10 degrees C. The extensive peripheral cooling, especially in the feet, was demonstrated in the calves aged 1-10 days. The lowest foot temperature (+10.5 degrees C) was measured in a 4-day-old calf at -14.5 degrees C. Slight shivering thermogenesis was recorded in the calves aged 1-4 days and occasionally in the older calves at low values of Ta. Shivering appears to be a reserve mechanism against severe cold. At about +20 degrees C and above the calves increased their Tre (approximately 1 degree C), oxygen consumption and heart rate. In the newborn calves oxygen consumption rose four- to five-fold and in 1-month-old calves about two-fold. Fast growing calves (maximum 400 g/day) appear to be more stressed by heat than by cold exposure.  相似文献   

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