The influence of the nasal mucosa and the carotid rete upon hypothalamic temperature in sheep
1. In chronically-prepared sheep, intracranial temperatures were measured in the cavernous sinus among the vessels of the carotid rete and at the circle of Willis extravascularly, and in the preoptic area and in other brain stem regions. Extracranial temperatures were measured intravascularly in the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1968-10, Vol.198 (3), p.561-579 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. In chronically-prepared sheep, intracranial temperatures were measured in the cavernous sinus among the vessels of the
carotid rete and at the circle of Willis extravascularly, and in the preoptic area and in other brain stem regions. Extracranial
temperatures were measured intravascularly in the carotid or internal maxillary arteries and on the nasal mucosa and the skin
of the ear.
2. At 20° C ambient temperature, shifts in temperature of the hypothalamus and of other brain sites paralleled temperature
shifts in the cerebral arterial blood which was cooler than central arterial blood. During periods of arousal and of paradoxical
sleep, vasoconstriction of the nasal mucosa and the ear skin occurred and temperatures at the cerebral arteries and in the
brain rose without a comparable rise in central arterial blood temperature.
3. Anaesthetic doses of barbiturate abolished the temperature oscillations in the cerebral arterial blood and the brain. When
air was blown rapidly over the nasal mucosa in anaesthetized animals, temperatures dropped precipitously in the cavernous
sinus, at the cerebral arteries, and in the brain, while central arterial temperature fell only slightly. Injections of latex
into the facial venous system demonstrated a venous pathway from the nasal mucosa to the cavernous sinus.
4. When sheep were exposed to 45-50° C ambient temperature, respiratory rate increased 5-10 times and the temperature gradient
between central and cerebral arterial blood widened.
5. It is concluded that venous blood returning from the nasal mucosa and the skin of the head to the cavernous sinus cools
the central arterial blood in the carotid rete. This is an important factor in the maintenance of hypothalamic temperature
in the wool-covered, long-nosed, panting sheep and undoubtedly affects hypothalamic thermoreceptors and temperature regulation
in artiodactyls. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1968.sp008626 |