首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.

1. Impulse activity of phasically firing (bursting) paraventricular neurons, which are assumed to be of the vasopressinergic type, have been extracellularly recorded in brain slices of the rat.

2. Analysis of burst patterns during temperature changes, angiotensin II application and combined application of both stimuli demonstrated that certain burst parameters are effected much stronger than the mean firing rate and also for a longer period of time.

3. The most sensitive parameter was the intraburst frequency which is considered to be the most effective parameter for increased vasopressin release.

4. These data indicate that there are functionally relevant changes in the impulse patterns which are not necessarily manifested in the mean firing rate.

Author Keywords: Hypothalamus; Paraventricular nucleus; PVN; Vasopressin; AVP; Angiotensin II; Neuronal temperature sensitivity; Osmoregulation; Phasic activity; Burst; Impulse pattern; Neuromodulation; Neuronal interactions; In vitro; Rat  相似文献   


2.

1. 1.|Neuronal activity in slices of the preoptic and anterior hypothalamic area of guinea-pigs during slow low-amplitude temperature changes analogous to temperature changes in the brain of endothermic animals, was extracellularly recorded.

2. 2.|42% of neurons showed threshold temperature responses. The threshold of response averaged 37.4°C for warm-sensitive neurons during warming and 37.0°C for cold-sensitive neurons during cooling.

3. 3.|The thresholds differed, on average, by 0.1°C in the same neuron at repeated temperature changes.

4. 4.|With temperatures 0.8°C above threshold on average (0.2°C in some units) neuronal activity reached a new high level that did not change either during a further exceeding of the threshold or prolonged maintenance of suprathreshold temperature.

5. 5.|The characteristics of the threshold temperature response of a hypothalamic neuron meet the criteria of thermoinduced structural rearrangements of cell membranes, caused by phase transitions of lipids, changes in protein conformation and cytoskeletal activity.

Author Keywords: Hypothalamic slice; thermosensitive neuron; threshold temperature response; guinea-pig  相似文献   


3.

1. There are differences between warm sensitive and temperature insensitive neurons in the rostral hypothalamus.

2. In warm sensitive neurons, temperature affects the rate of depolarization in prepotentials that precede action potentials. Warming increases the depolarization rate, which shortens the interspike interval and increases firing rate.

3. Inactivation of the potassium A current is temperature sensitive and contributes to the depolarizing prepotential.

4. In addition to intrinsic mechanisms, neuronal warm-sensitivity is affected by inhibitory synaptic input. Since cooling increases neuronal resistance, temperature affects the amplitude of postsynaptic inhibitory potentials, and this enhances neuronal thermosensitivity.

Author Keywords: Hypothalamus; Preoptic; Thermosensitive neuron; Synapse; GABA; Electrophysiology  相似文献   


4.
1. Hypothalamic thermosensitive neurons are important in the integrative regulation of body temperature. In addition to receiving afferent thermal input, their activity correlates with the stimulation of thermoregulatory mechanisms.

2. While cold sensitivity is synaptically mediated, warm sensitivity depends on inherent cellular responses. Warm sensitive neurons may also respond to other homeostatic variations, hormones, and endogenous mediators.

3. In contrast to peripheral thermoresponsiveness, which depends on conductance changes that regulate membrane potential, hypothalamic warm sensitivity relies on regulating the prepotential phase of the action potential.

4. Additionally, the recent morphologic characterization of these neurons supports the criterion for warm sensitivity.

Keywords: Hypothalamus; Thermoregulation; Electrophysiology; ThermoTRP channels; A-currents; Morphology; Thermosensitivity  相似文献   


5.

1. 1. In a diel cycle Procambarus clarkii has two preferred temperatures: 24.0 ± 0.15 SEM °C during the day and 26.7 ± 0.13 SEM °C at night.

2. 2. The preferred temperatures are independent from the weight of the organisms.

3. 3. In the photophase the animals are dispersed, in the scotophase they congregate.

4. 4. The crawfish seem to feed during the thermal interphases.

5. 5. Animals in a constantly dark condition maintain a diel preferendum of temperature.

Author Keywords: Diel thermoregulation; Procambarus clarkii  相似文献   


6.

1. 1.Muscle potentials in fibrillar flight muscles of worker and drone honeybees were recorded extracellularly at thoracic temperatures from 30 to 10°C.

2. 2.Extinction temperatures for muscle potentials were higher in drones for all treatments.

3. 3.Cold acclimation (15°C) lowered extinction temperatures significantly in workers and drones. Acclimitization changed extinction temperatures significantly only in drones.

4. 4.Cold acclimitization had a bigger effect on the rate of muscle potential amplitude decline with decreasing temperature than acclimation.

5. 5.Acclimation and acclimitization had no effect on the increase of muscle potential duration with falling temperature.

6. 6.Muscle potential frequency during shivering was not much different between cold and warm treated bees.

Author Keywords: Honeybee (Apis mellifera) workers and drones; flight muscle potentials; temperature acclimation and acclimitization  相似文献   


7.

1. 1. The detection of dampness in hygroscopic materials has been investigated both by subjective tests and by the application of a model of the physical mechanisms involved.

2. 2. Subjects were asked to rate the degree of dampness of a range of materials of different moisture contents after a short period of contact with the inner forearm.

3. 3. Skin and fabric inner surface temperatures were recorded

4. 4. It was found that highly hygroscopic wool fabrics were perceived as being dryer and maintained a higher temperature at the skin surface than polyester, a less hygroscopic fabric, during fabric-skin contact.

5. 5. A physical model of the sorption/desorption process in hygroscopic materials has been developed from knowledge of fibre sorption kinetics and has been used to study the physical processes which take place at the skin-fabric interface during transient contact.

6. 6. These predictions agree well with the subjective responses and the measured temperatures.

Author Keywords: Dampness; fabrics; hygroscopic; mechanism; skin temperature  相似文献   


8.
(1) Investigations of the effect of temperature on body size are largely limited to the larval phase, with our understanding of the effect of temperature during metamorphic climax entirely restricted to the insects.

(2) Environmental temperature was manipulated only during metamorphosis in the aquatic amphibian Xenopus laevis.

(3) Lower temperatures during metamorphosis resulted in individuals with greater mass, head width and snout–vent length on the completion of metamorphosis.

(4) This suggests that temperatures experienced during the relatively short metamorphic phase will play an important part in determining the temperature–size relationship in amphibians.

Keywords: African clawed toad; Amphibian; Body size; Metamorphic climax; Morphological variation; Temperature–size rule; Xenopus laevis  相似文献   


9.
The cultivation temperature-dependent rate of multiplication in amoebae was studied using three strains of Amoeba proteus and another amoeba strain of unknown specific and generic position.

1. 1. The multiplication rates are characterized by optima that vary with strains.

2. 2. The temperature-induced changes in the multiplication rate of a given strain are non-hereditary; they are common modifications.

3. 3. Hereditary interstrain differences in the multiplication rate have also been shown at constant temperatures.

4. 4. The range of modificational changes with increase or decrease of cultivation temperature appears to be greater than interstrain differences in multiplication rate.

Author Keywords: Amoeba proteus; multiplication rate; temperature  相似文献   


10.

1. 1.|Neural activity was recorded in hippocampal slices from noncold-acclimated, cold-acclimated and hibernating hamsters.

2. 2.|Action potentials from a population of hippocampal pyramidal neurons were evoked by stimulating an afferent fiber tract, the Schaffer collaterals. The temperature of the artificial cerebrospinal fluid bathing the slice was varied by controlling the temperature of a water chamber jacketing the recording chamber.

3. 3.|The temperature just below that at which a population spike could be evoked, Tt, was 15.8 ± 0.9°C (mean ± SEM) for noncold-acclimated hamsters, 13.9 ± 0.3°C for cold-acclimated hamsters and 12.3 ± 0.3°C for hibernating hamsters.

4. 4.|These thresholds for evoked activity were significantly different in noncold-acclimated, cold-acclimated and hibernating hamsters, and may reflect acclimation of hippocampal neurons to cold.

Author Keywords: Hibernation; Mesocricetus auratus; hippocampal slice; temperature; CA1 pyramidal cells  相似文献   


11.

1. 1.|Temperatures at four sites along the ventral nasal concha were recorded in four unrestrained rabbits exposed to ambient temperatures from 0 to 35°C.

2. 2.|The nasal temperatures decreased and temperature gradients from proximal to distal parts of the concha increased in cold-exposed rabbits.

3. 3.|The temperature gradients increased also during panting in heat-stressed rabbits.

4. 4.|The ventral nasal concha is suggested to be an efficacious heat exchanger both in cold and hot ambient, due to its geometry and vascularization.

Author Keywords: Rabbits; temperature regulation; nasal passageway; heat exchange; Oryctolagus cuniculus  相似文献   


12.

1. 1.|Heat production (HP) and body temperature (Tb) measurements were conducted at ambient temperatures (Ta) between 10 and 40°C. In addition preference temperatures (PT) were determined in a temperature channel and Tb was measured at preferred Ta

2. 2.|The influence of age on Tb at constant, as well as at PT, was proved. Increasing age was accompanied by an elevation of Tb whereas HP remained constant in the mid-range of Ta

3. 3.|The lower Tb in the first days of life is suggested to result from a lower thermoregulatory set point during the postnatal period.

4. 4.|The PT were different for the observed types of behaviour. The PT at rest was higher than the PT during locomotion, food intake and drinking.

Author Keywords: Bird; Meleagris gallopavo; heat production; body temperature; preference temperatures; thermoregulatory set point  相似文献   


13.

1. 1. The risks encountered during cold exposure are general body cooling or local cooling of parts of th body.

2. 2. Measures of cold stress must account for the effects of climate, clothing and metabolic heat production on heat balance.

3. 3. The combinaed effect of air temperature, mean radiant temperature, humidity and air velocity determines the cooling power of the environment.

4. 4. The cooling power can be easily converted into a required insulation value (IREQ) for whole body heat balance.

5. 5. Extensive cooling of hands and feet may be a limiting factor, even when sufficient total insulation is provided. In addition the cooling effect of wind on unprotected skin must be considered.

6. 6. Recommendation regarding acceptable exposures can be expressed as lowest ambient temperatures and time limits as function of available protection and activity level, with due attention to both general and local effects.

Author Keywords: Cold stress; clothing; method; temperature; limit values  相似文献   


14.

1. 1. Ten male students remained in a severely cold room (-25°C) for 20 min. thereafter, they transferred in a warm room (25°C) for 20 min.

2. 2. This pattern was repeated three times, total cold exposure time amounting to 60 min.

3. 3. In the warm room, the subjects removed their cold-protective jackets, or wore them continously.

4. 4. Rectal temperature, skin temperatures, manual performance and thermal comfort were measured during the experiment.

5. 5. Removing cold-protective jackets after severe cold exposure increased peripheral skin temperatures and reduced the discomfort in the warm room.

6. 6. However, these results were accompanied by a greater decrease in rectal temperature and manual performance.

7. 7. It is recommended that workers continue to wear cold-protective clothing in the warm areas outside of the cold storage to prevent decreases in deep body temperature and work efficiency caused by repated cold exposures.

Author Keywords: Cold environment; body temperature; manual performance; protective clothing  相似文献   


15.

1. 1.|Hypothalamic and rectal temperatures were recorded in 8 warm-reared (wr) and in 12 warm-acclimated control rats during resting in the heat and during 30 min running under thermoneutral conditions.

2. 2.|Brain and body temperatures of wr rats were significantly higher (P < 0.001) than control rats, both in normothermia as well as in hyperthermia; at rest, and also during exercise.

3. 3.|Warm-reared rats were more tolerant to heat.

4. 4.|During normothermia a weak selective brain cooling was present in control but absent in wr rats. During hyperthermia, however, the cooling intensified in control and occurred in wr rats.

5. 5.|The main strategy of adaptation to heat in wr rats is an upward resetting of the temperature set-point and increased passivity.

Author Keywords: Warm rearing; temperature regulation; exercise; heat stress; selective brain cooling; rats  相似文献   


16.

1. 1.Increased heat tolerance in FHM-cells from Pimephales promelas (Pisces) can be induced by culturing the cells at elevated temperatures (heat resistant acclimation) as well as by heat shock (heat hardening).

2. 2.After shift of culturing temperature (CT) from 16 to 32°C both effects are detectable with different temporal patterns.

3. 3.Cellular concentrations of heat-shock proteins correlate with the hardening effect but not with heat resistance acclimation.

4. 4.Several culturing temperature specific proteins were detected. The patterns of some enzymes are also altered by culturing temperature.

5. 5.Heat resistance acclimation is not caused by selection of a thermoresistant subpopulation of cells.

6. 6.Heat hardening and heat resistance acclimation must be distinguished as different phenomena in FHM-cells.

Author Keywords: Culturing temperature specific proteins; esterase isoenzymes; FHM-cells; heat hardening; heat-shock proteins; heat resistance acclimation; thermotolerance  相似文献   


17.

1. Water fleas (Daphnia magna) bred at 23°C were non-responsive to temperatures between 13 and 25°C.

2. At the lower (11°C) and upper limits (30°C) their klinokinetic avoidance behaviour showed a larger intraindividual than interindividual variation.

3. Thermal sensitivity for avoidance responses in D. magna was about 1.5°C.

4. For D. magna bred for one parthenogenetic generation at 14°C heat avoidance temperature was about 8°C lower, and cold avoidance temperature was about 1°C higher than in D. magna from 23°C.

5. In group experiments the animals showed some preference for the acclimation temperature.

6. Cold induced stenothermy and warm induced eurythermy in D. magna were related to the mode of reproduction.

Author Keywords: Thermal gradients; Thermal sensitivity; Avoidance; Preference; Daphnia magna; Thigmotaxis; Eurythermy; Stenothermy; Reproduction  相似文献   


18.

1. 1.|Fourteen male volunteers were examined under passive heating.

2. 2.|Electrical skin resistance (ESR) and rectal temperature (Tre) were measured during the whole period of exposure.

3. 3.|It was found that:

• —|ESR decreases rapidly with increasing air temperature. Assuming an exponential curve yields a mean time constant of 14 min.

• —|There is a correlation between the individual ESR time constants and Tre increases (r = 0.695, P < 0.005).

• —|Additional changes of ESR were noted in 8 subjects at a constant air temperature of 42°C.

4. 4.|It is concluded that ESR may be a useful indicator of the sweating response of the human thermoregulatory system during exogenous heat load.

Author Keywords: Electrical skin resistance; rectal temperature; sweating; heating, man  相似文献   


19.

1. 1. To examine the influence of different bed conditions (ondol sleep, bed sleep on ondol with same bedding) of the Korean ondol traditional heating system on human response during sleep, bed climates and physiological responses such as skin and rectal temperatures, weight loss, body movement and subjective sensation were measured with 4 grown-up females as subjects while they were sleeping for 7 h.

2. 2. Bed climate: Temperatures under the mattress and inside the quilt were higher on ondol while temperatures on the mattress and humidity inside the quilt were higher on the bed.

3. 3. Rectal temperature was significantly higher on ondol; skin temperature showed no major differences in relation to bed conditions. The frequency of body movements had the highest correlation with bed climate of the parameters measured.

4. 4. Mattress weight decreased on ondol and increased on the bed.

5. 5. The frequency of body movements was significantly higher in ondol sleep.

6. 6. The subjects sensation showed difference on cushion sensation between the two types of bed condition.

7. 7. To obtain the same level of comfort on both ondol and bed sleeping conditions less thermal insulating value is needed for ondol sleep.

Author Keywords: Bed climate; floor heating; ondol; skin temperature; body movement  相似文献   


20.

1. 1. Ten guinea-pigs with hypothalamic and subcutaneous interscapular thermocouples ran up to exhaustion at 1.5 km/h. Blood lactate concentrations were determined before and after exercise. Four animals exercised at constant ambient temperatures of 15 and 35°C and six other animals ran at variable ambient temperatures, adjusted to stabilize their hypothalamic temperature at 39.5, 40.5 and 41.5°C.

2. 2. Ambient temperature did not influence exercise performance directly. Duration of running was inversely proportional to hypothalamic temperature. There were no correlations between lactate concentration and exercise performance nor between lactate concentration and body temperatures.

3. 3. The results suggest a progressive decrease in exercise performance occurs with increasing body temperature.

Author Keywords: Cavia porcellus; exercise; exhaustion; hyperthermia; selective brain cooling; lactic acid  相似文献   


设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号