1979
DOI: 10.1038/280490a0
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Rapid effect of change in cerebrospinal fluid sodium concentration on salt appetite

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Cited by 48 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Intraventricular injection of CSF [Na + , 500 mM] rapidly decreased deprivation-induced sodium intake in sheep (Weisinger et al, 1979). However, when osmolality of the CSF was increased by intraventricular injection of mannitol, which decreased [Na + ], sodium intake was augmented (Weisinger et al, 1979). These results suggest that the brain contains sodium-sensitive neurons or osmoreceptors that monitor the [Na + ] of CSF and regulate the ingestion of sodium accordingly.…”
Section: Other Contributors : Baroreceptors and Osmoreceptorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Intraventricular injection of CSF [Na + , 500 mM] rapidly decreased deprivation-induced sodium intake in sheep (Weisinger et al, 1979). However, when osmolality of the CSF was increased by intraventricular injection of mannitol, which decreased [Na + ], sodium intake was augmented (Weisinger et al, 1979). These results suggest that the brain contains sodium-sensitive neurons or osmoreceptors that monitor the [Na + ] of CSF and regulate the ingestion of sodium accordingly.…”
Section: Other Contributors : Baroreceptors and Osmoreceptorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Support for osmoreceptor regulation of salt appetite comes from studies that manipulated the sodium concentration of CSF and subsequently examined sodium consumption. Intraventricular injection of CSF [Na + , 500 mM] rapidly decreased deprivation-induced sodium intake in sheep (Weisinger et al, 1979). However, when osmolality of the CSF was increased by intraventricular injection of mannitol, which decreased [Na + ], sodium intake was augmented (Weisinger et al, 1979).…”
Section: Other Contributors : Baroreceptors and Osmoreceptorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One major challenge in neurobiology of the hydromineral homeostasis is to reveal the existence, at the level of the brain, of specific sensors involved in the control of the water and mineral balance. Fluctuations in plasma and CSF [Na ϩ ] not only trigger short-term adjustments, such as the release of antidiuretic and natriuretic hormones from the neurohypophysis (Bourque et al, 1994;Hussy et al, 2000;Voisin and Bourque, 2002), but also long-term regulation that controls thirst and specific appetite for salt (Weisinger et al, 1979(Weisinger et al, , 1982Denton et al, 1996). It has been hypothesized that specific brain Na ϩ sensors initiate sodium intake (Weisinger et al, 1979;Denton et al, 1996) as well as natriuresis (Cox et al, 1987;Denton et al, 1996), and the recent discovery of coincident detectors of extracellular fluid osmolarity and [Na ϩ ] in the supraoptic nucleus (SON) established the cellular basis for Na ϩ detection in this nucleus (Voisin et al, 1999;Voisin and Bourque, 2002).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, there must be two central circuits that are activated by different types of dehydration and inhibited by α 2 -adrenoceptors, one for the control of water and the other for the control of saline intake. As mentioned above, these circuits share the activation by ANG II and by volume receptors during extracellular dehydration (1,15,16), but one (water) is activated (1,28,29) and the other (saline) is inhibited (17,30,31) by the increase in osmolality or in sodium concentration. Furthermore, aldosterone release activated by ANG II during (15), in spite of the controversy on whether central or systemic ANG II is important for saline intake (15,(33)(34)(35)(36).…”
Section: Water Intakementioning
confidence: 99%