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J Appl Physiol 87: 170-174, 1999;
8750-7587/99 $5.00
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Vol. 87, Issue 1, 170-174, July 1999

Role of AVP in mediating the altered core temperature response to a simulated open field in pregnant rats

Patricia A. Tang, James E. Fewell, and Heather L. Eliason

Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Health Sciences Centre, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1

Near the term of pregnancy, rats have an attenuated core temperature response on exposure to a novel environment (e.g., a simulated open field) compared with that observed early in pregnancy or in nonpregnant rats. The present experiments were carried out on 26 nonpregnant and 26 pregnant rats to test the hypothesis that arginine vasopressin, functioning as an endogenous antipyretic substance in the central nervous system, mediates this attenuated core temperature response. Exposure to a simulated open field after intracerebroventricular (ICV) vehicle produced a significant increase in core temperature in both nonpregnant and pregnant animals, the magnitude and duration of which were greater in the nonpregnant rats. In nonpregnant rats, exposure to a simulated open field after ICV vasopressin V1-receptor antagonist altered the pattern of the core temperature response but not the core temperature index compared with that observed on exposure to a simulated open field after ICV vehicle. In pregnant animals, ICV vasopressin V1-receptor antagonist did not alter the core temperature response to a simulated open field compared with that observed after ICV vehicle. Thus our data do not support the hypothesis that a pregnancy-related activation of arginine vasopressin attenuates the core temperature response to a simulated open field in rats near the term of pregnancy.

arginine vasopressin; endogenous antipyretic; fever; stress-induced hyperthermia





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