Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Phagocytic cells contain NADPH oxidase that they use for host defense by catalyzing the production of superoxide. Bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) has been found to stimulate NADPH oxidase in mobile and sessile macrophages and microglia. It also evokes fever in homeothermic animals and men, a reaction mediated by central nervous system (CNS) activities. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether reactive oxygen species are involved in
LPS
-induced fever. In rabbits we found that plasma hydroperoxide levels increased and catalase activity decreased 15 min after
LPS
injection and that fever started with a similar latency, while plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) increased 30 min after the injection. Treating rabbits with methylene blue or aspirin did not affect TNFalpha secretion but prevented the
LPS
-induced rise of hydroperoxides and the inactivation of catalase, abolishing fever. Incubation of human blood with nitroblue tetrazolium and
LPS
increased the number of formazan-positive neutrophils from 10 +/- 5 to 52 +/- 9%. Adding
LPS
to blood preincubated with either methylene blue, alpha-lipoic acid, or aspirin respectively decreased the number of formazan-positive neutrophils to 0.9 +/- 0.8, 0.8 +/- 0.9, or 2.0 +/- 0.9%, disclosing the antioxidant capacity of these drugs. Systemic application of 80 mg/kg alpha-lipoic acid elicited heat-loss reactions within 15 min and decreased core temperature by 2.2 +/- 0.3 degrees C within 2 h. Alpha-lipoic acid applied 45 min after
LPS
induced antipyresis within 15 min, and this antipyresis was associated with a decrease of elevated hydroperoxide levels and restoration of catalase activity. Our results show that fever is prevented when the production of reactive oxygen species is blocked and that an elevated body temperature returns to normal when oxygen radical production decreases. Estimation of plasma dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA) levels following injection of 80 mg/kg alpha-lipoic acid in afebrile and febrile rabbits revealed that this acid is converted into DHLA, which in afebrile rabbits increased the plasma DHLA concentration from 2.22 +/- 0.26 microg/ml to peak values of 8.60 +/- 2.28 microg/ml DHLA within 30 min and which in febrile rabbits increased it from 0.84 +/- 0.22 microg/ml to peak values of 3.90 +/- 0.94 microg/ml within 15 min. Methylene blue, aspirin, and alpha-lipoic acid, which all cross the blood-brain barrier, seem to act not only on peripheral tissues but also on the CNS. Brain structures that have been shown to sense oxidative stress are vicinal thiol groups attached to the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor. Their reduction by thiol-reducing drugs like dithiothreitol or DHLA has been found to increase glutamate-mediated neuronal excitability, while the opposite effect has been observed after their oxidation. Because we found that systemic application of alpha-lipoic acid in the afebrile state elicits
hypothermia
and in the febrile state is antipyretic, we think this type of NMDA receptor is involved in thermoregulation and that oxidation of its thiol groups induces fever. It appears that temperature homeostasis can be maintained only if the redox homeostasis of the brain is guaranteed.
...
PMID:Inhibition of oxygen radical formation by methylene blue, aspirin, or alpha-lipoic acid, prevents bacterial-lipopolysaccharide-induced fever. 1284 35
We tested the hypothesis that the nitric oxide (NO) pathway in the central nervous system (CNS) plays a role in
hypothermia
, as well as in the febrile response during experimental septic shock, by regulating vasopressin (AVP) release. Experiments were performed on male Wistar rats treated with NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), a non-selective NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor, injected intracerebroventricularly (250 microg/1 microl) 30 min before
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) 1.5 mg/kg i.v. injection. One hour after
LPS
administration we observed a significant drop in body temperature (hypothermic response), followed by a temperature increase after the second hour (febrile response), which remained until the end of the experiment. Increased plasmatic AVP levels were concomitantly observed during
hypothermia
, nearly returning to basal levels during the febrile phase. When L-NAME was administered with
LPS
, plasmatic AVP concentrations remained high throughout the experiment,
hypothermia
was accentuated and the febrile response was abolished. Additionally, pre-treatment with beta-mercapto-beta,beta-cyclopentamethylenepropionyl1, O-Et-Tyr2, Val4, Arg8-vasopressin, an AVP V1 receptor blocker (10 microg/kg) administered i.v., reduced
hypothermia
and exacerbated the febrile response to endotoxin. In conclusion, our data indicate that the central NO pathway plays an inhibitory role in AVP release during experimental septic shock, which seems to be critical for the thermoregulation during this pathophysiological state.
...
PMID:Role of nitric oxide in thermoregulation during septic shock: involvement of vasopressin. 1453 Sep 75
Rats have an attenuated febrile response to exogenous (e.g. bacterial endotoxin) and endogenous pyrogen (e.g. interleukin-1beta) near the term of pregnancy, the mechanism of which is unknown. The present experiments were carried out on 71 non-pregnant and 181 pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats to determine if basal levels of the endogenous antipyretic substance, interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra), change relative to interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) throughout gestation. Furthermore, we have constructed complete Escherichia coli
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) dose-core temperature response curves in non-pregnant and pregnant rats on days 10, 15 and 20 of gestation (term of gestation approximately 21 days) to determine if the attenuated febrile response near the term of pregnancy results from a simple shift of the dose-response relationship or results from a dampening of the overall dose-response relationship. Basal IL-1beta, as determined by ELISA on trunk blood from non-pregnant and pregnant rats on days 10, 15 and 20 of gestation (d10, d15, d20), did not change significantly during pregnancy. Basal IL-1ra, however, was increased significantly in d15 rats as compared to non-pregnant, and d10 and d20 rats. The attenuated febrile response near the term of pregnancy, as determined by biotelemetry, did not result from a simple shift of the E. coli
LPS
dose-core temperature response curve but rather a dampening of the overall dose-response relationship. The febrile responses to EC(50) and EC(100) doses of E. coli
LPS
were preceded by a period of
hypothermia
, and were delayed and attenuated near the term of pregnancy as compared to that observed early in pregnancy and in non-pregnant rats. Our data provide evidence that pregnant rats are more sensitive to the
hypothermia
-producing effects of E. coli
LPS
than are non-pregnant rats and allow us to speculate that elevated basal IL-1ra may play a role in mediating the attenuated febrile response to pyrogen on day 15 but not on day 20 of gestation in rats.
...
PMID:Influence of pregnancy on plasma cytokines and the febrile response to intraperitoneal administration of bacterial endotoxin in rats. 1460 73
Aging is accompanied by an altered stress response that underlies increased susceptibility of the elderly patients to physiological stress such as infection and sepsis. In the present study, we investigated the effects of aging on mortality,
hypothermia
, and cytokine induction in mouse models of intra-abdominal sepsis and endotoxemia. Systemic inflammation associated with either cecal ligation/puncture (CLP) or injection with bacterial endotoxin,
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
), resulted in a significantly elevated mortality rate in aged (24 months) compared to young (4 months) mice. The aged mice also showed profound
hypothermia
during these inflammatory stresses; the severity of
hypothermia
at the early phase of sepsis or endotoxemia could predict the mortality of individual animals. The stress-mediated induction of interleukin-1beta, interleukin-6, and interleukin-10 (IL-1beta, IL-6, and IL-10) in the circulating blood tended to be higher with aging in both CLP and
LPS
models, and in particular, the induction of IL-6 was significantly augmented with aging. The serum level of IL-6 showed a strong correlation with degrees of
hypothermia
. In the heart and lungs, the induction of mRNA for IL-6 and IL-10 was also significantly enhanced with aging. These results clearly demonstrate an age-associated increase in mortality,
hypothermia
, and induction of IL-6 during endotoxemia and sepsis.
...
PMID:Effects of aging on mortality, hypothermia, and cytokine induction in mice with endotoxemia or sepsis. 1465 93
Angiotensin II (ANG II), a bioactive peptide that plays important roles in blood-pressure and body-fluid regulation, has recently been reported to be involved in normal thermoregulation and fever. In the case of thermoregulation, ANG II lowers body temperature when administered centrally or systemically (i.e. "exogenous" ANG II acts as a
hypothermia
-inducing agent). In contrast, "endogenous" ANG II is involved both in heat-loss responses in a hot environment and in thermogenesis in the cold. It therefore seems likely that endogenous ANG II is involved in maintaining body temperature at the set-point. In the case of fever, it has been reported that endogenous brain ANG II and its type 1 receptor mediate or modulate the fever induced by "restraint stress". At the final step in "pyrogen-induced" fever, brain ANG II facilitates the fever induced by prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) through its action on the type 2 receptor, whereas at its first step the
lipopolysaccharide
(LPS, 2 microg/kg, i.v.)-induced production of pyrogenic cytokines [such as interleukin-1 (IL-1)] involves an action of endogenous ANG II through its type 1 receptor. On the other hand, it is well known that a very high dose of LPS (50-5000 microg/kg) injected systemically induces
hypothermia
in rodents. This
hypothermia
is presumably initiated by tumor necrosis factor (TNF). Since ANG II contributes to the LPS-induced production of cytokines such as IL-1beta, as described above, it is possible that the generation of TNF by LPS involves an action of ANG II, too, and that this TNF production leads to the LPS-induced
hypothermia
. Together, these findings suggest that ANG II and its receptors make a number of contributions to normal thermoregulation, to fever, and to the
hypothermia
in systemic inflammation.
...
PMID:Angiotensin II: its effects on fever and hypothermia in systemic inflammation. 1476 80
Opiate addicts have been shown to have a high susceptibility to bacterial infection. We investigated how treatment with morphine alters
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
)-induced inflammatory responses in the rat. Chronic morphine alone elevated serum endotoxin levels. Animals treated with morphine and
LPS
(250 microg/kg) developed
hypothermia
, decreased mean arterial pressure (MAP), increased plasma thrombin anti-thrombin III (TAT) complex, and approximately 67% of animals exhibited progressive intramicrovascular coagulation. Morphine also enhanced
LPS
-induced leukocyte-endothelial adhesion (LEA), suppressed leukocyte flux, and corticosterone production, and elevated interleukin-1beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and interleukin-6 serum levels. Our study presents both the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying the potentiated
LPS
-induced inflammation and accelerated progression to septic shock seen with chronic morphine exposure.
...
PMID:Chronic morphine accelerates the progression of lipopolysaccharide-induced sepsis to septic shock. 1502 69
While moderate
hypothermia
is protective against ischemic cardiac and brain injury, it is associated with much higher mortality in patients with sepsis. We previously showed that in vitro exposure to moderate
hypothermia
(32 degrees C) delays the induction and prolongs the duration of TNF-alpha and IL-1beta secretion by
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
)-stimulated human mononuclear phagocytes. In the present study, we extended these observations by showing that moderate
hypothermia
exerts effects on TNF-alpha and IL-1beta generation in the human THP-1 monocyte cell line that are similar to those that we previously found in primary cultured monocytes; that
hypothermia
causes comparable changes in cytokine generation stimulated by zymosan, toxic shock syndrome toxin-1, and
LPS
; and that
hypothermia
causes similar changes in TNF-alpha and IL-1beta mRNA accumulation. TNF-alpha mRNA half-life, determined after transcriptional arrest with actinomycin D, was not significantly prolonged by lowering incubation temperature from 37 to 32 degrees C, suggesting that
hypothermia
modifies TNF-alpha gene transcription. This finding was further supported by reporter gene studies showing a threefold increase in activity of the human TNF-alpha promoter at 32 vs. 37 degrees C. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay revealed that
hypothermia
prolonged NF-kappaBeta activation, identifying a potential role for this transcription factor in mediating the effects of
hypothermia
on TNF-alpha and IL-1beta production. Delayed reexpression of the inhibitor IkappaBalpha, shown by Northern blotting and immunoblotting, may account in part for the prolonged NF-kappaBeta activation at 32 degrees C. Augmentation of NF-kappaBeta-dependent gene expression during prolonged exposure to
hypothermia
may be a common mechanism leading to increased lethality in sepsis, late-onset systemic inflammatory response syndrome after accidental
hypothermia
, and neuroprotection after ischemia.
...
PMID:Hypothermia prolongs activation of NF-kappaB and augments generation of inflammatory cytokines. 1507 Aug 15
Fever is an integral part of the host's defense to infection that is orchestrated by the brain. A reduced febrile response is associated with reduced survival. Consequently, we have asked if early life immune exposure will alter febrile and neurochemical responses to immune stress in adulthood. Fourteen-day-old neonatal male rats were given Escherichia coli
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) that caused either fever or
hypothermia
depending on ambient temperature. Control rats were given pyrogen-free saline. Regardless of the presence of neonatal fever, adult animals that had been neonatally exposed to
LPS
displayed attenuated fevers in response to intraperitoneal
LPS
but unaltered responses to intraperitoneal interleukin 1beta or intracerebroventricular prostaglandin E(2). The characteristic reduction in activity that accompanies fever was unaltered, however, as a function of neonatal
LPS
exposure. Treatment of neonates with an antigenically dissimilar
LPS
(Salmonella enteritidis) was equally effective in reducing adult responses to E. coli
LPS
, indicating an alteration in the innate immune response. In adults treated as neonates with
LPS
, basal levels of hypothalamic cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2), determined by semiquantitative Western blot analysis, were significantly elevated compared with controls. In addition, whereas adult controls responded to
LPS
with the expected induction of COX-2, adults pretreated neonatally with
LPS
responded to
LPS
with a reduction in COX-2. Thus, neonatal
LPS
can alter CNS-mediated inflammatory responses in adult rats.
...
PMID:Long-term alterations in neuroimmune responses after neonatal exposure to lipopolysaccharide. 1516 84
Intermittent (every-other-day) feeding initiated at 19 months of age and continued for 12 weeks, led to a moderate decrease in body weight of aging rats, enhanced survival and modified diurnal changes in body temperature and fever response to bacterial endotoxin (E. coli
lipopolysaccharide
, LPS). Diet-restricted animals which survived LPS administration, displayed reduced febrile response, i.e. (i) a moderate
hypothermia
in an early phase, and (ii) a delayed onset of body temperature elevation, as compared with their ad libitum-fed controls. However, peak body temperature values were similar in both groups. The rats of both groups which did not develop hyperthermia in response to LPS, died within 24 h of LPS administration. In control, but not in diet-restricted rats, variations in body weight during the 12 weeks prior LPS administration may be predictable in regard to their survival after LPS treatment. It seems that the resistance to bacterial endotoxin in aging rats is associated with their ability to develop hyperthermia.
...
PMID:Dietary restriction modifies fever response in aging rats. 1537 20
Obese (f/f) Koletsky rats lack the leptin receptor (LR), whereas their lean (F/?) counterparts bear a fully functional LR. By using f/f and F/? rats, we studied whether the LR is involved in
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
)-induced fever and
hypothermia
. The body temperature responses to
LPS
(10 or 100 microg/kg iv) were measured in Koletsky rats exposed to a thermoneutral (28 degrees C) or cool (22 degrees C) environment. Rats of both genotypes responded to
LPS
with fever at 28 degrees C and with dose-dependent
hypothermia
at 22 degrees C. The fever responses of the f/f and F/? rats were identical. The hypothermic response of the f/f rats was markedly prolonged compared with that of the F/? rats. The prolonged hypothermic response to
LPS
in the f/f rats was accompanied by enhanced NF-kappaB signaling in the hypothalamus and an exaggerated rise in the plasma concentration of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. The f/f rats did not respond to
LPS
with an increase in the plasma concentration of corticosterone or adrenocorticotropic hormone, whereas their F/? counterparts did. The hypothermic response to TNF-alpha (80 microg/kg iv) was markedly prolonged in the f/f rats. These data show that the LR is essential for the recovery from
LPS
hypothermia
. LR-dependent mechanisms of the recovery from
LPS
hypothermia
include activation of the anti-inflammatory hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, inhibition of both the production and hypothermic action of TNF-alpha, and suppression of inflammatory (via NF-kappaB) signaling in the hypothalamus.
...
PMID:A new function of the leptin receptor: mediation of the recovery from lipopolysaccharide-induced hypothermia. 1538 70
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>