Abstract
To analyze the dynamic properties of body temperature and effector mechanisms during endotoxin fever, both experimental and mathematical procedures were applied. Experiments were carried out on rabbits in a climatic chamber at various ambient temperatures. Salmonella typhosa endotoxin (0.1 microgram/kg) was injected into an ear vein. A biphasic core temperature increase evoked by different effector mechanisms depending on ambient temperature was observed. A mathematical model based on experimental results with nonfebrile rabbits predicts the effector behavior at all ambient temperatures. From a comparison of experimental results with the model prediction, it is concluded that the increase of core temperature during fever is essentially caused by a dynamic shift of the controller characteristics. The effect of the pyrogen may be simulated by a resultant fever-controlling signal that is biphasic but increases more steeply than does core temperature. The analysis suggests that the three possible fever-driving effectors, metabolism, ear blood flow, and respiratory evaporative heat loss, should be controlled by the same resultant signal, although the time courses of the effectors and of core temperature vary distinctly at different air temperatures. The model uses an additive controller structure.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
17 articles.
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