1969
DOI: 10.1007/bf01897574
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Evoked release of 5-HT and NEFA from the hypothalamus of the conscious monkey during thermorégulation

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Cited by 25 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…When the donor monkey was cooled by placing dry ice in the chamber in which it was sitting, the cross-infusion of its ventricular fluid or of its push-pull perfusate produced shivering and a rise in 553 W. FELDBERG AND P. N. SAXENA temperature in the recipient monkey. Myers, Kawa & Beleslin (1969) tested the push-pull perfusate on the isolated rat stomach fundus strip and found that, like 5-HT, it contracted the strip and, further, that this 5-HT-like activity was greatly increased in perfusate collected during cooling of the monkey. However, the amounts of 5-HT assayed in this way in perfusate from cooled monkeys probably would not have been sufficient to produce the observed hyperthermia in the recipient monkey, because they were of the order of nanograms, whereas micrograms are required to produce hyperthermia in monkeys by injection of 5-HT into the anterior hypothalamus, as was shown by Myers (1968) himself, and by Myers & Yaksh (1969).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When the donor monkey was cooled by placing dry ice in the chamber in which it was sitting, the cross-infusion of its ventricular fluid or of its push-pull perfusate produced shivering and a rise in 553 W. FELDBERG AND P. N. SAXENA temperature in the recipient monkey. Myers, Kawa & Beleslin (1969) tested the push-pull perfusate on the isolated rat stomach fundus strip and found that, like 5-HT, it contracted the strip and, further, that this 5-HT-like activity was greatly increased in perfusate collected during cooling of the monkey. However, the amounts of 5-HT assayed in this way in perfusate from cooled monkeys probably would not have been sufficient to produce the observed hyperthermia in the recipient monkey, because they were of the order of nanograms, whereas micrograms are required to produce hyperthermia in monkeys by injection of 5-HT into the anterior hypothalamus, as was shown by Myers (1968) himself, and by Myers & Yaksh (1969).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recently, some thermosensitive neurones have been found in an area extending from the posterior hypothalamus to the mesencephalon (Nakayama & Hardy, 1969;Cabanac & Hardy, 1969). From the monoamine theory of thermoregulation (Feldberg & Myers, 1964) heat production would be activated by the release of 5-HT within the anterior hypothalamus when an animal is cold (Myers, Kawa & Beleslin, 1969), whereas noradrenaline is released to inhibit the heat production pathway when the animal is warm Myers & Yaksh, 1969). The release of these substances within the thermostat are presumed to occur in response to thermal stimuli, and help to regulate temperature around a given set-point which has been determined inherently .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…stimulus could cause a presynaptic release of 5-HT, and a warm stimulus, the liberation of noradrenaline. In the case of the indoleamine, it has already been shown that 5-HT is released principally from the rostral hypothalamus when the monkey is cooled (Myers, Kawa & Beleslin, 1969;Myers & Beleslin, 1971). However, the evidence for the release of noradrenaline in response to peripheral warming is at present only indirect, since the sole neurochemical change thus far observed within the anterior region is an increase in non-esterified fatty acids following peripheral heating .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%