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. 1990 Oct;259(4 Pt 1):E534-41.
doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.1990.259.4.E534.

Thermogenesis following meal feeding, isoproterenol, and cold in rats with LH lesions

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Thermogenesis following meal feeding, isoproterenol, and cold in rats with LH lesions

S W Corbett et al. Am J Physiol. 1990 Oct.

Abstract

Responses to several thermogenic stimuli were measured in rats maintaining stable but reduced body weights following lateral hypothalamic (LH) lesions. Oxygen consumption was monitored in open-circuit respirometers before and after exposure to cold (16.5 degrees C), intubation of a meal, and isoproterenol injection (40 micrograms/kg 0.75). Observations were made in both warm- (28 degrees C) and cold-acclimated (9 degrees C) LH-lesioned rats. Cold exposure, intubation, and drug injection each caused marked increases in heat production in sham- and LH-lesioned rats. This thermogenic response was similar in magnitude and form for both groups. Acclimation to 9 degrees C caused increased baseline levels of heat production when measured at 28 degrees C. Subsequent exposure to thermogenic stimuli revealed an exaggerated response to isoproterenol but not intubation in cold-acclimated groups. The LH-lesioned cold-acclimated rats responded in the same manner as sham-lesioned cold-acclimated rats. These findings are in contrast to the immediate postlesion period when rats show enhanced thermogenic activity. At reduced body weights LH-lesioned rats show normal rates of heat production and make normal responses to thermogenic stimuli. Enhanced thermogenesis does not appear to play a role in the maintenance of chronically reduced body mass in LH-lesioned rats.

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