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Fever in Ectotherms: Evolutionary Implications
Authors:KLUGER   MATTHEW J.
Affiliation:Department of Physiology, University of Michigan Medical School Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
Abstract:Fever, an elevated thermoregulatory "set-point," occurs in vertebratesfrom fishes through mammals in response to infection with appropriatepathogens. The long phylogenetic history of fever supports thehypothesis that fever has an adaptive or beneficial role (i.e.,fever is a component of the host's immunological defenses).Besides providing insight into determining the role of feverin disease, ectothermic vertebrates have also served as excellentanimal models to specifically answer many questions relatingto fever and disease. For example, survival studies using goldfishes,lizards, and newborn mammals which are also virtually ectothermic)have shown that an elevated body temperature increases the survivalrate of the infected organism. Furthermore, by using ectothermsit has been possible to demonstrate that the reduction in serumiron which accompanies most infections is not directly attributableto an elevation in body temperature. Nevertheless, a rise inbody temperature, coupled with a fall in serum iron, appearsto constitute a coordinated host defense mechanism in responseto at least some bacterial infections in reptiles and mammals,and perhaps other groups of vertebrates.
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