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Vol. 83, Issue 5, 1612-1616, 1997
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Calgary, Health Sciences Centre, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1
Received 11 December 1996; accepted in final form 19 June 1997.
Fewell, James E., and Patricia A. Tang. Influence of
nicotine on the core temperature response to a novel environment in
pregnant rats. J. Appl. Physiol.
83(5): 1612-1616, 1997.
Exposure of a male or nonpregnant female
rat to a novel environment, such as a simulated open field, induces a
transient increase in core temperature, which is often called
stress-induced hyperthermia. Pregnancy alters this response such that
the core temperature index increases significantly during exposure to a
simulated open field on day 10 but not
on days 15 and
20 of gestation in rats. The present
experiments were carried to investigate the effect of chronic
administration of nicotine (0, 1, 2, 4, or 8 mg · kg
1 · 24 h
1 for 13-15 days) on
the core temperature response to a simulated open field in chronically
instrumented pregnant (day 20 or
21 of gestation) and nonpregnant
Sprague-Dawley rats. In nonpregnant rats, the core temperature index
increased more during exposure to a simulated open field after chronic
administration of nicotine at all doses than after chronic
administration of vehicle; the core temperature response was not
dependent on the dose of nicotine. In pregnant rats, significant
increases in core temperature as well as in the core temperature index
occurred only during exposure to a simulated open field after chronic
administration of nicotine in doses of 2, 4, or 8 mg · kg
1 · 24 h
1; the core temperature
response was dependent on the dose of nicotine. Our data provide
evidence that chronic exposure to nicotine enhances the core
temperature response to a simulated open field in nonpregnant rats and
unmasks a maternal thermogenic response that is not seen to the same
stimulus near term of pregnancy. The possible physiological consequences for the fetus are presently unknown and require
investigation.
pregnancy; stress-induced hyperthermia; thermoregulation
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