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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (
cage
)
29,987
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Studies were undertaken to evaluate the fundamental conditions for a low-intensity voluntary wheel running model in rats and its chronic effects on health indexes. Male Fischer rats (SPF) 5 weeks of age were housed in individual sedentary conditions or in individual wheel-
cage
units which allowed free access to voluntary wheel running for 8 months. Voluntary running averaged 640 +/- 198 m/day, reached a peak (965m) at the 2nd month and waned over time, reaching a plateau after the 6th month (about 400-500m). Exercising rats consumed more food (+23%), but exhibited decreased body weight gains (-9%), suggesting a remarkable lowering of fat. A lowering effect on resting blood pressure (-5%) was also recognized. In addition, preventive effects on oxygen toxicity and effective bactericidal activity of neutrophils and pulmonary alveolar macrophages (PAM) were suggested. Although the amount of exercise in this study was the smallest of the other preceding ones conducted with a voluntary wheel running model, many potential health benefits were recognized. Such health promoting and protective effects by low-intensity voluntary exercise and the harmfulness of forced exercise in rats have been reported in researches on cancer, lowering fat and hypertension. Therefore it is important to set up conditions for low-intensity voluntary running. It was also demonstrated by this study that strictly controlled environmental conditions, such as room temperature and humidity, a 12-hr light-dark cycle and prevention of infection and
psychological stress
to rats, as well as using male rats, which are more inactive, were important factors to establish this model.
...
PMID:[Conditions for low-intensity voluntary wheel running in rats and its chronic effects on health indexes]. 128 62
The purpose of this study was to compare the febrile responses of Fischer 344 rats of different ages [young (3-5 mo), mature (12-15 mo), and aged (24-27 mo; n = 8)] to two
psychological stress
paradigms,
cage
switch and exposure to an open field, as well as to injection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In addition, the cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) and interleukin-6 were also measured in the plasma of these rats at 90 min postinjection with LPS. There was no significant difference among groups in febrile responses to switching their cages. Exposure to an open field for 30 min resulted in a smaller rise in temperature in the aged rats (0.62 degree C) than in the young rats (1.26 degrees C). This difference disappeared if rats were exposed to an open field for 60 min. Injection of LPS led to fevers that developed at a slower rate in aged rats than in the mature groups. The peak fevers, however, were not different. The activity of interleukin-6 90 min after injection of LPS was higher in aged rats (297,858 U/ml) than in young (17,462 U/ml) and mature rats (28,819 U/ml). TNF levels were also higher in aged rats (16,380 U/ml) compared with young (574 U/ml) and mature rats (36 U/ml). We conclude that although the magnitude of the febrile response is not different among rats of different ages, the rise in body temperature occurs slower in aged rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fever, tumor necrosis factor, and interleukin-6 in young, mature, and aged Fischer 344 rats. 153 27
1. We investigated the effect of pre-treatment with intraperitoneal (I.P.) injection of indomethacin, an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis, on
psychological stress
-induced responses including cardiovascular, thermoregulatory and hormonal responses in free-moving rats. 2.
Psychological stress
was induced by
cage
-switch stress. After the rats were placed in the novel environment, blood pressure, heart rate and body temperature significantly increased. Plasma levels of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) and prostaglandin E2 were significantly higher 30 min after exposure to stress, in comparison to normal levels. 3. Pre-treatment with I.P. indomethacin significantly suppressed the increases in body temperature induced by
cage
-switch stress, but had no effect on increases in blood pressure and heart rate induced by this stress. Indomethacin also significantly suppressed the increases in the plasma levels of ACTH and prostaglandin E2 induced by
cage
-switch stress. 4. The present results suggest that prostaglandins are involved in the development of hyperthermia and the ACTH response induced by
psychological stress
.
...
PMID:Possible involvement of prostaglandins in psychological stress-induced responses in rats. 166 42
In this study, we tested the hypothesis that daily voluntary exercise results in a chronic elevation in core temperature in the female golden hamster. Temperature and activity were measured by biotelemetry. Hamsters ran 6-7 km per night (12:12 L:D) when permitted access to wheels. No running occurred during the light periods. During the 3rd wk of running, temperatures of exercising hamsters were significantly elevated by 0.5 degree C (P less than 0.001) during the dark period and by 0.3 degree C (P less than 0.003) during the light period compared with sedentary hamsters. Cessation of running removed the difference between groups, and resumption of running restored it. Both the injection of endotoxin and the
psychological stress
of
cage
switch resulted in similar peak temperatures in exercising and sedentary hamsters despite higher pre-treatment temperatures in the exercise group. We interpret these results to support the hypothesis that regular exercise may cause an upward resetting of the set-point for body temperature.
...
PMID:Body temperature rhythm and response to pyrogen in exercising and sedentary hamsters. 223 3
Psychological stress
(e.g., exposure to a novel environment) causes a rapid rise in body temperature in rats. In this study, we examined the roles of physical activity and the immune cytokine tumor necrosis factor or cachectin (TNF) in this temperature change. The elevation in temperature of rats exposed to
cage
-switch stress during the day correlated poorly with the increase in activity (r = 0.07; P = 0.84) and, during
cage
switch at night, correlated negatively (r = 0.64; P = 0.04). TNF was not detected in the plasma or cerebrospinal fluid of rats after exposure to open-field stress. However, the injection of antiserum against TNF 3.5 h before exposure to the stress of being in an open field resulted in a significantly greater hyperthermia than was seen in the control serum-injected rats (1.38 +/- 0.11 vs. 0.79 +/- 0.14 degrees C; P = 0.002). The peak temperature change after
cage
-switch stress was similarly increased in rats that had been injected with anti-TNF (0.82 +/- 0.08 vs. 0.50 +/- 0.08 degrees C; P = 0.016). This enhanced hyperthermia is similar to the excessively high fever that occurs during the later phase of lipopolysaccharide fever in animals that have been injected with antiserum against TNF. These data support the hypotheses that stress hyperthermia is a true fever and that TNF is an endogenous antipyretic, limiting the magnitude of this fever.
...
PMID:Antiserum against tumor necrosis factor increases stress hyperthermia in rats. 231 7
1. Plasma adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) concentrations were measured in rats following exposure to anaesthetic agents, after stimulation of peripheral sensory nerves, and during
psychological stress
. 2. In rats, kept in their home cages, the i.p. injection of sodium pentobarbitone did not cause an increase in plasma ACTH, whereas injection of urethane increased plasma ACTH several times. In rats transferred to a glass dessicator and inhaling oxygen, plasma ACTH was more than 3 fold higher than in rats in their home
cage
. Exposure to nitrous oxide, halothane or ether in a glass dessicator produced significantly higher plasma ACTH concentrations when compared to exposure in the home
cage
. 3. In rats anaesthetized with pentobarbitone, the electrical stimulation of large myelinated afferents in the sciatic nerve did not trigger a measurable increase in ACTH secretion, whereas stimulation of afferent A delta- and C-fibres significantly elevated plasma ACTH concentrations. Rats treated as neonates with capsaicin showed an attenuated ACTH response to A and C-fibre stimulation. 4. Similarly, capsaicin pretreatment reduced the increase in ACTH secretion during morphine withdrawal; a similar effect was produced by clonidine. 5. ACTH secretion following open field exposure, ether stress or hypoglycaemia was not changed by capsaicin pretreatment. 6. It was concluded that capsaicin-sensitive afferents are involved in the secretion of ACTH elicited by somatosensory forms of stress. Centrally evoked ACTH release is not affected by capsaicin pretreatment.
...
PMID:Neonatal capsaicin treatment of rats reduces ACTH secretion in response to peripheral neuronal stimuli but not to centrally acting stressors. 284 7
Prolactin along with corticosterone is a stress responsive hormone. The present study examined the effect of predictable and unpredictable
psychological stress
on corticosterone and prolactin secretion. Repeated unpredictable exposure to the novelty
cage
produced a more substantial increase in the level of corticosterone than predictable exposure to the same novelty apparatus. In contrast, predictable novelty stress induced a more substantial elevation in prolactin levels than unpredictable stress. Furthermore, it was observed that both corticosterone and prolactin returned to control levels 30 minutes after the fifth exposure to the novelty
cage
. It was concluded that the pattern of exposure to novelty is an important paradigm which effects the magnitude of hormonal responding. An important relationship between corticosterone release and prolactin secretion is also indicated.
...
PMID:Corticosterone and prolactin responses to predictable and unpredictable novelty stress in rats. 373 40
It is well known that stress is a stimulant for prolactin release. However, relatively few studies have investigated the role of psychological factors in prolactin secretion, and investigators have typically used one-time exposure and a single collection period in their studies. In our studies, attempts were made to carefully characterize the prolactin response to different psychological stressors by serially sampling blood from an indwelling cannula and to determine if repeated exposure to the stressor leads to habituation of the prolactin response. Exposure of the male rats to different novel situations such as being placed in a new
cage
, being placed on a platform in water, or being handled resulted in increased prolactin levels. As the rats habituated behaviorally to repeated exposure to similar situations, the prolactin response also attenuated. These findings show that psychological factors do play a role in influencing prolactin secretion and are consistent with the idea that as the
psychological stress
imposed by a stimulus becomes habituated, the prolactin response to that stimulus also becomes habituated.
...
PMID:Habituation of the prolactin response in rats to psychological stress. 403 25
A continuous infusion technique for rats is described which is a significant improvement upon existing procedures with regard to the degree of physiological and
psychological stress
it provokes. The system was assembled with a head attachment, a practical swivel and a special metabolic
cage
, permitting long-term tube feeding of unrestrained rats.
...
PMID:An improved procedure of chronic intravenous infusion in unrestrained rats. 407 Apr 39
1. We investigated whether afferent nerves are involved in the development of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) responses induced either by systemic administration of interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) and prostaglandin E2, or by
psychological stress
. The capsaicin desensitization method was used to impair afferent C fibres and we compared the ACTH responses between capsaicin desensitized and vehicle pretreated control rats. 2. The present results showed that the capsaicin desensitized rats had significantly smaller increases in plasma ACTH than the control rats in response to intravenous injection of IL-1 beta or prostaglandin E2. 3. There were no significant differences between the capsaicin desensitized and control rats in the ACTH responses induced by
cage
switch stress. 4. The capsaicin desensitized rats responded to intravenous injection of corticotrophin releasing factor (CRF) with a greater increase in the plasma level of ACTH than the control rats, indicating that capsaicin pretreatment resulted in augmentation of pituitary gland sensitivity to CRF. 5. These results suggest that afferent neurons play an important role in the ACTH responses induced by systemic injection of IL-1 beta or prostaglandin E2.
...
PMID:ACTH response induced in capsaicin-desensitized rats by intravenous injection of interleukin-1 or prostaglandin E. 818 86
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