Affiliation:
1. Showa Women’s University Graduate School, Tokyo 154;
2. National Institute of Health and Nutrition, Tokyo 162-8636, Japan; and
3. Department of Internal Medicine, Chonnam National University, Kwangju City 501-190, Korea
Abstract
Subcutaneous administration of capsaicin (5 mg/kg) immediately increased the temperature of the tail skin (Tsk) for 2 h in urethan-anesthetized rats, suggesting an increase in heat loss. O2 consumption, an index of heat production, also immediately increased after the capsaicin injection, and this increase lasted for >10 h. Colonic temperature (Tco) decreased within 1 h after the injection, and this decrease was followed by a long-lasting hyperthermic period. Adrenal demedullation largely attenuated the capsaicin-induced increase in O2consumption, and sympathetic denervation of the interscapular brown adipose tissue partly attenuated the increase in O2 consumption. However, capsaicin-induced heat loss was normal in these rats. In rats with cutaneous vasodilation maximized by warming and administration of hexamethonium, capsaicin did not further increase Tsk but normally induced heat production, and Tco gradually rose without a hypothermic period. Thus capsaicin simultaneously increased heat loss and heat production, and inhibition of one response did not affect the other. These findings suggest that capsaicin simultaneously activates independent networks for heat loss and heat production.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
73 articles.
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