Body temperature and wheel running predict survival times in rats exposed to activity-stress

被引:26
作者
Morrow, NS
Schall, M
Grijalva, CV
Geiselman, PJ
Garrick, T
Nuccion, S
Novin, D
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF LOS ANGELES, DEPT PSYCHOL, LOS ANGELES, CA 90095 USA
[2] UNIV CALIF LOS ANGELES, DEPT PSYCHIAT & BIOBEHAV SCI, LOS ANGELES, CA 90095 USA
[3] UNIV CALIF LOS ANGELES, W LOS ANGELES VET AFFAIRS MED CTR, CURE, DIGEST DIS RES CTR, LOS ANGELES, CA 90073 USA
[4] TULANE UNIV, DEPT PSYCHOL, NEW ORLEANS, LA 70118 USA
[5] LOUISIANA STATE UNIV, DEPT PSYCHOL, BATON ROUGE, LA 70808 USA
[6] LOUISIANA STATE UNIV, PENNINGTON BIOMED RES CTR, BATON ROUGE, LA 70808 USA
关键词
activity-stress; body temperature; wheel running; anorexia nervosa;
D O I
10.1016/S0031-9384(97)00243-6
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The relationship between restricted feeding, core body temperature (T-b), wheel running, survival, and gastric erosion formation was examined in female rats exposed to activity-stress. Core body temperature and gross motor activity were telemetrically monitored in four groups of rats that had free access to running wheels and in one group that was not allowed to run on the wheels. Twenty-four hours prior to the onset of hypothermia and predicted mortality, different groups were left undisturbed, warmed with a heal lamp, denied access to running wheels, or euthanized. Length of survival in wheel-running rats varied from 2 to 12 days. During the first day of food deprivation, premorbid changes in the variability of T-b during the diurnal period and the mean number of wheel revolutions during the nocturnal period were strongly predictive of length of survival. Warming rats with a heat lamp or preventing rats from ever running on the wheel increased the length of survival and attenuated gastric erosion formation. only rats that were warmed had a greater likelihood of survival. Gastric pathology was also reduced in rats that were euthanized prior to becoming moribund. Rats that were left undisturbed or locked from the running wheel over the last 24 h of testing became moribund and had extensive gastric mucosal damage. These results indicate that thermoregulatory disturbances induced by restricted feeding and not wheel running alone are critical in determining survival and the degree of gastric mucosal injury in rats exposed to activity-stress. Results further suggest that predisposing factors may put some rats at risk for the development of activity-stress-induced mortality. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:815 / 825
页数:11
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