Хуудас 1 -аас 163 үр дүн
d-Fenfluramine (d-Fen) has been demonstrated to alter body temperature (BT), decrease 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and decrease 5-HT plasma membrane transporters (PMT) in rats. Therefore, experiments were designed to test whether a correlation existed between elevated BT and brain 5-HT depletions. It
5-Hydroxytryptamine(1A) (5-HT1A) receptor activation reduces body temperature partially by dilating the thermoregulatory cutaneous vascular bed, thereby increasing heat transfer to the environment. Constriction of this vascular bed, with consequent reduction of heat transfer to the environment,
The injection of fenfluramine (7.5 mg kg-1,i.p.) to rats housed at 27-28 degrees C was associated with an elevation of core body temperature which peaked at approximately 1 h post-injection. One h pretreatment with citalopram (20 mg kg-1, i.p.), chlorimipramine (10 mg kg-1, i.p.), femoxetine (10 mg
Well established as supposed antidepressant drugs, desipramine (1.25-5 mg/kg), nisoxetine (0.625-2.5 mg/kg) and clomipramine (1.25-5 mg/kg) but not fluoxetine (2.5-40 mg/kg) or citalopram (2.5-40 mg/kg) dose-dependently potentiated TRH (40 mg/kg)-induced hyperthermia in mice. Alpha-adrenergic
1. We have investigated the effects of endogenous monoamine depletion on the development of fever in rats. 2. Fever was produced in rats by a single intraperitoneal injection of Salmonella typhosa endotoxin or leucocyte pyrogen manufactured from ox blood. 3. Depletion of brain 5-hydroxytryptamine
An experiment was conducted using lonidamine and gossypol against Ehrlich tumour in the foot pad of CD-1 mice. These compounds alone were mild antitumour agents, but their cytotoxicity increased when they were combined with hyperthermia. The antitumor effect was further increased by
5-HT uptake inhibitors and pirenperone (a 5-HT2 receptor antagonist), which in previous experiments antagonized fenfluramine (5-HT releaser)-induced hyperthermia in heat adapted rats, were tested against hyperthermia induced by the directly acting 5-HT agonist--m-CPP and quipazine. Pirenperone and
1. Administration of two doses of amphetamine HCl (5 mg/kg intraperitoneally) 45 min apart raised body temperature of rats by an average of 3.4 degrees C and increased the turnover rate of brain 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) by almost one-half.2. Both effects were blocked by exposure to 4 degrees C or
1 Unilateral intrahypothalamic injection of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) caused a dose-related fall in core temperature in rats, whereas injection of tryptamine into the same site caused a dose-related rise in core temperature. 2 The core temperature changes induced by 5-HT or tryptamine were
5-Hydroxytryptamine injected into posterior and anterior parts of the pigeon hypothalamus evoked a short lasting hyperthermia or hypothermia, respectively. Variable responses obtained within the same brain region suggest the existence of different 5-HT systems, even in rather limited hypothalamic