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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pflügers Archiv 366 (1976), S. 153-157 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Blood flow ; Cardiac output distribution ; Cold stress ; Microspheres ; Thermoregulation ; Sheep circulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Conscious adult Merino sheep were studied in a thermoneutral environment and then during cold exposure. Microspheres labelled with141Ce,51Cr,85Sr, and46Sc were used to measure blood flow ( $$\dot Q$$ ) in most tissues of the body. (Microspheres labelled with125I were found to be unsatisfactory.) Cold exposure which caused a marked decrease in skin surface temperature and mild, continuous shivering but no change in deep body temperature, was associated with mean increases in oxygen consumption, heart rate, and cardiac output (C.O.) of 100%, 62%, and 48%, respectively; blood pressure and total peripheral resistance were unchanged. There was approximately a 6-fold increase in $$\dot Q$$ in perirenal white adipose tissue, and a 3- to 4-fold increase in muscles of the upper foreleg and hindleg, and the intercostals; myocardial $$\dot Q$$ also increased significantly. There was a marked decrease in $$\dot Q$$ in skin of the legs and ears, in the maxillo turbinals and in the nasal mucosa, and a decrease in the total proportion of C.O. passing through arteriovenous anastomoses. Thus, not only did C.O. increase, but there was a redistribution appropriate to meet the challenge with which the animal was confronted.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Blood flow ; Cardiac output distribution ; Hypothalamic control of blood flow ; Thermoregulation ; Microspheres
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Radioactive microspheres were used to assess the influence of hypothalamic temperature on tissue blood flow and the regional distribution of cardiac output in conscious sheep chronically prepared with hypothalamic thermodes. Hypothalamic heating elicited panting in 6 animals, and in these, blood flow rate increased in respiratory muscles and decreased in the thyroids, kidneys, spleen and gut; cardiac output did not change, but was redistributed in a pattern similar to that seen during spinal cord heating, which differs from that which occurs during exposure to a warm environment. Four other animals did not pant in response to hypothalamic heating, but showed small but definite increases in capillary blood flow in skin of extremities. Reasons for the two different types of response to heating are discussed. The failure to detect increases in microsphere-measured extremity skin blood flow in the first group and only small changes in the second group above, despite the increased skin temperature always seen with hypothalamic heating, is attributed to specific influences of CNS stimulation on arteriovenous anastomoses. In 6 animals, hypothalamic cooling elicited visible shivering associated with increased oxygen consumption; blood flow rate decreased in skin and increased in respiratory and non-respiratory muscles, fat and the myocardium; cardiac output showed an increase and a redistribution similar to that which occurs during exposure to a cold environment. Arterial blood pressure was steady, but there were changes in regional vascular resistance. Therefore, and in view of other studies, the blood flow responses observed are attributed to regional differentiation of sympathetic activity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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