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BEHAVIORAL THERMOREGULATION IN MICE INOCULATED WITH INFLUENZA-VIRUS
[摘要] Mice housed at 30-degrees-C and inoculated with a mouse-adapted influenza virus show a fall in body temperature (T(b)) and a decrease in food intake to almost 0 grams per day. This study tested whether the fall in T(b) could be accounted for by the decreased food intake and whether the fall in T(b) was due to a decrease of thermoregulatory set point or to an inability to maintain T(b) at set point level. The fall in T(b) of influenza-infected mice was greater than that of food-deprived mice. When food deprived, mice given access to a thermal gradient increased their preference for warmer areas in the gradient and, as a result, T(b) did not fall as much as T(b) of starved mice not given access to a thermal gradient. When infected with influenza virus, mice given a thermal gradient decreased T(b), less and at a slower rale than mice not given a gradient. However, this fall in T(b) of influenza-infected mice was greater than that of food-deprived mice given a thermal gradient. Mice given a thermal gradient increased their preference for the warmer temperatures after inoculation; this returned to preinoculation preference for cooler temperatures during the later days of infection despite a continuous fall in T(b). Influenza-infected mice given a thermal gradient survived significantly fewer days than infected mice not given a thermal gradient. We conclude that the influenza-induced fall of T(b) in mice cannot be explained solely by the decrease in food intake, and is partially due to a decrease in thermoregulatory set point.
[发布日期] 1992-12-01 [发布机构] 
[效力级别]  [学科分类] 
[关键词] THERMAL GRADIENT;TEMPERATURE;FOOD DEPRIVATION;THERMOREGULATORY SET-POINT;BEHAVIORAL THERMOREGULATION [时效性] 
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