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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Regulation of energy balance consists of two intertwined circuitries: food intake-- metabolic rate--body weight, vs. metabolic rate--heat loss--body temperature. Metabolic rate serves interaction between the two. Some peptides influence individual components of energy homeostasis, without having coordinated anabolic or catabolic properties. Anabolic and catabolic peptides function with redundancy, and also show specific features. They all influence ingestive behavior vs. metabolic rate and temperature, but do not necessarily act directly at central thermoregulatory pathways. Most of them alter metabolic rate (but not heat loss) through the ventromedial nucleus, while consequent moderate changes in thermal signals can influence function of the preoptic/anterior hypothalamic region and initiate compensating regulatory steps to restore temperature. Thus, besides ingestion, these peptides influence metabolic rate, whereas the passive temperature changes will only be obvious as long as environmental circumstances allow. Other substances cause coordinated central regulatory changes resembling fever (e.g. cholecystokinin), anapyrexia, or cold-defense: they primarily affect body temperature, and then the temperature-dependent changes in catabolic/anabolic peptide functions alter feeding behavior. Such arrangement can secure relative independence of the two regulatory circles, allowing for minimization of depression in metabolic rate and body temperature during
starvation
(despite elevated anabolic activity), or for increased food intake with lack of
hypothermia
in cold adaptation (despite high anabolic activity), or for normal body temperature in overfed states (despite enhanced catabolic activity), etc. However, the independence is relative since the two systems interact in the overall regulation of energy homeostasis: neuropeptides influence body temperature and temperature modifies peptide actions.
...
PMID:Regulation of energy balance by peptides: a review. 1610 37
Neglect, defined as the failure of a caregiver to adequately provide safety, food, clothing, shelter, education, protection, medical/dental care, and supervision for a child in his/her care, is a relatively uncommon but important cause of child mortality. A retrospective review of pediatric deaths (age 18 years or less) referred to the Medical University of South Carolina Forensic Pathology Office for autopsy over the past 25 years revealed 16 deaths due to some type of pediatric neglect. Cases were analyzed as to age, sex, race, cause and manner of death, autopsy findings, ancillary studies, past medical history, social/family history, and caregiver. Six cases of malnutrition/
starvation
and/or dehydration were identified, composing the most common cause of death in the neglect cases identified and the majority of the homicides due to neglect. Other deaths in which neglect contributed significantly included toxic ingestions (2 cases), hyper-/
hypothermia
(2 cases), unusual drowning/aspiration (4 cases), electrocution (1 case), and delayed/absent medical therapy (2 cases, including one of the previously mentioned ingestions). Of these additional cases, 7 were certified as accidental manner, 2 as natural, and 1 as a homicide. Cases which fell into a "gray zone" in which the appropriateness of invoking neglect was a matter of opinion or societal convention were excluded from the review; examples included conventional accidental drowning, choking on food or aspiration of foreign body, overlying/wedging during sleep, accidental hanging, and motor-vehicle traffic accidents (pedestrians, unrestrained passengers). The findings of this review reinforce the fact that malnutrition/
starvation
and dehydration compose the most common form of lethal pediatric neglect while highlighting less common forms of neglect and the difficulty of determining manner of death in cases in which neglect plays a more questionable role than in seemingly clear-cut malnutrition/
starvation
and dehydration cases. We demonstrate the typical victim and scenario that investigators will encounter in cases of fatal pediatric neglect, often a child under the age of 1 year who has been deprived of food and/or drink for some time, or an older, more independently mobile child who has not been adequately supervised. These children may or may not have a demonstrable prior history of maltreatment or (nonfatal) neglect, and review of medical records is an important part of the investigation. We additionally discuss key gross autopsy findings, appropriate specimen collection, helpful ancillary studies, microscopic findings of significance, potential mimickers of neglect, and other special considerations in cases of pediatric neglect.
...
PMID:A 25-year retrospective review of deaths due to pediatric neglect. 1612 Oct 76
Warm-blooded diving animals wintering in polar regions are expected to show a high degree of morphological adaptation allowing efficient thermal insulation. In stark contrast to other marine mammals and seabirds living at high latitudes, Arctic great cormorants Phalacrocorax carbo have very limited thermal insulation because of their partly permeable plumage. They nonetheless winter in Greenland, where they are exposed to very low air and water temperatures. To understand how poorly insulated diving endotherms survive the Arctic winter, we performed year-round recordings of heart rate, dive depth and abdominal temperature in male great cormorants using miniature data loggers. We also examined the body composition of individuals in the spring. Abdominal temperatures and heart rates of birds resting on land and diving showed substantial variability. However, neither
hypothermia
nor significantly lower heart rate levels were recorded during the winter months. Thus our data show no indication of general metabolic depression in great cormorants wintering in Greenland. Furthermore, great cormorants did not reduce their daily swimming time during the coldest months of the year to save energy; they continued to forage in sub-zero waters for over an hour every day. As birds spent extended periods in cold water and showed no signs of metabolic depression during the Arctic winter, their theoretical energy requirements were substantial. Using our field data and a published algorithm we estimated the daily food requirement of great cormorants wintering in Greenland to be 1170+/-110 g day(-1). This is twice the estimated food requirement of great cormorants wintering in Europe. Great cormorants survive the Arctic winter but we also show that they come close to
starvation
during the spring, with body reserves sufficient to fast for less than 3 days. Lack of body fuels was associated with drastically reduced body temperatures and heart rates in April and May. Concurrent, intense feeding activity probably allowed birds to restore body reserves. Our study is the first to record ecophysiological parameters in a polar animal on a year-round basis. It challenges the paradigm that efficient thermal insulation is a prerequisite to the colonization of polar habitats by endotherms.
...
PMID:Year-round recordings of behavioural and physiological parameters reveal the survival strategy of a poorly insulated diving endotherm during the Arctic winter. 1627 46
Biochemical, genetic and imaging studies support the involvement of the serotonin (5-HT) system in anorexia nervosa. Activity-based anorexia (ABA) is considered an animal model of anorexia nervosa, and combines scheduled feeding with voluntary running wheel activity (RWA). We investigated the effect of d-fenfluramine (d-FEN) treatment on development and propagation of ABA. d-FEN is an appetite suppressant and acts on 5-HT(2C) receptors that are located on pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus. Since stimulation activation of the melanocortin system stimulates ABA, we hypothesized that d-FEN treatment enhances the development and propagation of ABA. Rats were exposed to the ABA model and chronically infused with d-FEN. Unexpectedly, d-FEN-treated ABA rats did not reduce food intake or increase wheel running as compared with vehicle-treated ABA rats. Furthermore d-FEN treatment did not affect body weight loss, hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis activation, or
starvation
-induced
hypothermia
in ABA rats. POMC mRNA levels in d-FEN-treated rats were not different from vehicle-treated rats after one week of exposure to the ABA paradigm. However, d-FEN-treated ABA rats showed hypodypsia and increased plasma osmolality and arginine-vasopressin expression levels in the hypothalamus. We conclude that d-FEN treatment does not enhance ABA under the experimental conditions of this study, but strongly reduces water intake in ABA rats.
...
PMID:The appetite suppressant d-fenfluramine reduces water intake, but not food intake, in activity-based anorexia. 1646 35
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha) regulates the utilization of fat as an energy source during
starvation
and is the molecular target for the fibrate dyslipidemia drugs. Here, we identify the endocrine hormone fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) as a mediator of the pleiotropic actions of PPARalpha. FGF21 is induced directly by PPARalpha in liver in response to fasting and PPARalpha agonists. FGF21 in turn stimulates lipolysis in white adipose tissue and ketogenesis in liver. FGF21 also reduces physical activity and promotes torpor, a short-term hibernation-like state of regulated
hypothermia
that conserves energy. These findings demonstrate an unexpected role for the PPARalpha-FGF21 endocrine signaling pathway in regulating diverse metabolic and behavioral aspects of the adaptive response to
starvation
.
...
PMID:Endocrine regulation of the fasting response by PPARalpha-mediated induction of fibroblast growth factor 21. 1755 Jul 73
Many small passerines are resident in forests with very cold winters. Considering their size and the adverse conditions, this is a remarkable feat that requires optimal energy management in several respects, for example regulation of body fat reserves, food hoarding and night-time
hypothermia
. Besides their beneficial effect on survival, these behaviours also entail various costs. The scenario is complex with many potentially important factors, and this has made 'the little bird in winter' a popular topic for theoretic modellers. Many predictions could have been made intuitively, but models have been especially important when many factors interact. Predictions that hardly could have been made without models include: (i) the minimum mortality occurs at the fat level where the marginal values of
starvation
risk and predation risk are equal; (ii)
starvation
risk may also decrease when food requirement increases; (iii) mortality from
starvation
may correlate positively with fat reserves; (iv) the existence of food stores can increase fitness substantially even if the food is not eaten; (v) environmental changes may induce increases or decreases in the level of reserves depending on whether changes are temporary or permanent; and (vi) hoarding can also evolve under seemingly group-selectionistic conditions.
...
PMID:Theoretical models of adaptive energy management in small wintering birds. 1782 99
Our previous studies demonstrated the usefulness of screening determinations of acetone as an initial diagnostic criterion in deaths due to
hypothermia
, alcoholic ketoacidosis, diabetes mellitus,
starvation
and some poisonings. In alcoholemia, particularly in cases of prolonged ethanol consumption, the above-mentioned conditions may not result in acetonemia, despite marked concentrations of beta-hydroxybutyrate acid (beta-HBA). Therefore, for the purpose of the present study, the method of beta-HBA determination was modified using GC-MS-EI and applied to analyze 47 autopsy blood samples of individuals who died suddenly due to unknown causes. In 15 cases, the concentration of beta-HBA was higher than 1000 micromol/l; in six subjects from this group, the acetone concentration was lower than 250 micromol/l. In some cases, thus, the use of beta-HBA as an additional diagnostic criterion allows for explaining the pathomechanism of premortal metabolic disturbances.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic usefulness of the beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetone ratio in medico-legal diagnostics of sudden deaths]. 1790 21
Effects of selenium on reproductive success were assessed in red-winged blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus). Mean egg selenium (MES) ranged from 2.96 to 21.7 mg/kg dry weight with individual eggs up to 40 mg/kg. Uptake was non-linear: increments in MES declined as aqueous selenium increased; the asymptote was approximately 23 mg/kg. Eggs were heavier and more were laid in 2004 compared to 2005, a year of record rainfall and below-normal temperatures. Mortality of embryos that were incubated to full term was low (2.6% in 2004 and 3.2% in 2005), as was the prevalence of embryonic defects (2.7% in 2004 and 5.1% in 2005). Abnormalities in nestlings were also rare. Egg mortality was caused by predation, weather, and parental abandonment. Nestlings died from predation,
starvation
, and
hypothermia
associated with rain and cold, drowning, and bacterial infections. Nestling liver concentrations reached 81 mg/kg dry wt. selenium and were highest at the most highly selenium-exposed sites. Blood glutathione peroxidase (a selenium-dependent enzyme indicative of selenium exposure) was unrelated to liver selenium concentrations, egg selenium, or ambient selenium exposure. The selenium concentration in prey that parents fed to nestlings was higher at the selenium-exposed sites (up to 37 mg/kg dry wt. Se) compared to reference sites. Aqueous selenate:selenite ratios were related to redox differences and were much higher at the site with the highest MES, liver selenium, and prey item selenium concentrations. Hatchability showed U-shaped, or hormesis, relationships with MES: productivity increased with selenium concentrations at low exposures and decreased at high exposures. The effects threshold was approximately 22 mg/kg dry wt. MES.
...
PMID:Non-linear uptake and hormesis effects of selenium in red-winged blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus). 1796 20
The present study with alpacas determined effect of dam's age on body weight and survival of cria during the first week of life. Pregnant dams (n=424) and their crias were used in the study. Cria body weight (kg) was determined at time of placenta expulsion. Placenta weight and larger width were measured immediately after expulsion. Crias were monitored for the first week and a necropsy was performed if death occurred. Data were analyzed using analysis of variance. The body weight of crias at birth, the weight, and the largest width of placenta increased with age of the dam (P<0.05), reaching a peak at 9 years and then declined progressively. Placental efficiency also increased with the dam's age, and showed a bimodal shape, peaking at 6- and 11-year-old dams (P<0.05). Altogether, 398 crias survived and 26 died; of those 6 died of
starvation
, 5 of
hypothermia
, 4 were stillborn and the rest from other miscellaneous causes. More crias died from 2-year-old dams than from dams of any other age (P<0.05). In addition, dead crias had lesser body weights (6.4kg) than those of crias that survived (7.8kg, P<0.05). The weight and width of the placenta was similar for live and dead crias.
...
PMID:Cria alpaca body weight and perinatal survival in relation to age of the dam. 1842 12
Acute
starvation
attenuates the fever response to pathogens in several mammalian species. The underlying mechanisms responsible for this effect are not fully understood but may involve a compromised immune and/or thermoregulatory function, both of which are prerequisites for fever generation. In the present study, we addressed whether the impaired innate immune response contributes to the reported attenuation of the fever response in fasted rats during LPS-induced inflammation. Animals fasted for 48 h exhibited a significant and progressive
hypothermia
prior to drug treatment. An intraperitoneal injection of LPS (100 microg/kg) resulted in a significantly attenuated fever in the fasted animals compared with the fed counterparts. This attenuation was accompanied by the diminution in the concentration of some [TNF and IL-1 receptor antagonist (RA)] but not all (IL-1beta and IL-6) of the plasma cytokines normally elevated in association with the fever response. Nevertheless, fasting had no effect on the LPS-induced inflammatory responses at the level of the brain, as assessed by mRNA expressions of inhibitory factor(I)-kappaB, suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS3), IL-1beta, cyclooxygenase (COX)-2, and microsomal PGE synthase (mPGES)-1 in the hypothalamus, as well as by PGE2 elevations in the cerebrospinal fluid. In contrast, fasting significantly attenuated the fever response to central PGE2 injection. These results show that fasting does not alter the febrigenic signaling from the periphery to the brain important for central PGE2 synthesis but does affect thermoregulatory mechanisms downstream of and/or independent of central PGE2 action.
...
PMID:Immune-to-brain signaling and central prostaglandin E2 synthesis in fasted rats with altered lipopolysaccharide-induced fever. 1848 Feb 40
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