Affiliation:
1. Department of Physiology and Biophysics, The University of Calgary Health Sciences Centre, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1
Abstract
Experiments were carried out on chronically instrumented newborn and older rabbits to characterize their core temperature (Tc) responses to acute hypoxemia and to differentiate “forced” vs. “regulated” thermoregulatory responses. Three age ranges of kits were studied: 4–6, 9–11, and 28–30 days of age. During an experiment, Tc, selected ambient temperature (Ta), and oxygen consumption were measured from kits studied in a thermocline during a control period of normoxemia, an experimental period of normoxemia or hypoxemia (fraction of inspired oxygen 0.10), and a recovery period of normoxemia. We reasoned that no change or a decrease in Tawhile Tc decreased during hypoxemia would indicate a regulated thermoregulatory response, whereas an increase in Ta while Tc decreased during hypoxemia would indicate a forced thermoregulatory response. Tc decreased during acute hypoxemia in the older kits but not in the 4- to 6-day-old kits; the decrease in Tc was accentuated on postnatal days 28–30 compared with postnatal days 9–11. Ta decreased or stayed the same during exposure to acute hypoxemia. Our data provide evidence that postnatal maturation influences the Tc response of rabbits to acute hypoxemia and that the decrease in Tc during hypoxemia in the older kits results from a regulated thermoregulatory response.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology