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Journal ArticleDOI

Oxygen consumption, body temperature, and brown adipose tissue in the postnatal golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus).

R. D. Rink
- 01 Jan 1969 - 
- Vol. 170, Iss: 1, pp 117-123
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TLDR
During the latter stage of maturation studied in these experiments, days 17 to 21, the animals achieved homeothermic stability between 25° and 36°C, and the animals had gained significant weight, thereby increasing thermal insulation, and brown fat deposits had accumulated additional lipid.
Abstract
Postnatal hamsters were examined for a metabolic response to cold by measuring oxygen consumption at ambient temperatures of 25°, 30°, 33°, and 36°C. In conjunction with this, colonic temperatures were recorded, and the animals were examined for brown adipose tissue development. During the first ten days of postnatal development hamsters increased their O2 consumption linearly as ambient temperature was raised from 25° to 36°C. Thus, they are initially poikilothermic. Body temperatures were directly dependent on environmental temperature, and no mature brown fat deposits had yet developed. On days 11 and 12, O2 consumption curves began to vary from a linear relation with ambient temperature, and small inflexions developed at 30° and 33°C. By postnatal days 14 and 15 maximal values were recorded at 25°C. Simultaneously, brown fat deposits developed definitive characteristics and body temperatures came to range only slightly below adult temperatures during exposure at 25°C. During the latter stage of maturation studied in these experiments, days 17 to 21, the animals achieved homeothermic stability between 25° and 36°C. Only 25°C prompted a metabolic increase, 30° to 36°C became a zone of thermal neutrality, and body temperatures came to equal or exceed adult temperatures. The animals had gained significant weight, thereby increasing thermal insulation, and brown fat deposits had accumulated additional lipid.

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Citations
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Thermogenic mechanisms in brown fat.

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Use of hypothermia for general anesthesia in preweanling rodents

TL;DR: Documentation and rationale are provided for the use of deep hypothermia alone for anesthesia during surgical manipulations in young preweanling rodents and moderate hypotheria as an adjunct to other anesthesia in older preweANling animals.
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GDP-binding to the brown fat mitochondria of developing and cold-adapted rats

TL;DR: This work has investigated GDP-binding to brown adipose tissue mitochondria of the rat during post-natal development and during cold adaptation, and it finds a good correlation between this parameter and the expected thermogenic activity of the tissue.
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The Ontogeny of Homeothermy in Neonatal Peromyscus leucopus

TL;DR: It is concluded that early-age young in their natural environment, living together as a litter in a nest, can remain homeothermic at low Ta for at least 2.5-3.0 h despite their inadequacies when tested as individuals and that the ability for individuals to remain homethermic atLow Ta develops rapidly at about the same age (14 days) as eye-opening permits young to wander safely from the nest.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral thermoregulation in newborn rabbits.

TL;DR: In this study, ambient temperature had a powerful influence on the behavior of newborn rabbits, and, providing they were warm, they did not huddle, and smell and contact with littermates did not appear to have a major effect.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The fine structure of brown adipose tissue in the newborn mouse and rat.

TL;DR: The findings have reaffirmed the epithelioid character of brown adipose tissue, and provided additional information on the relation of its cells to each other and to the rich capillary bed, but observations on the mitochondria and their relation to fat droplets have led to different conclusions concerning the role of these organelles in lipogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxygen consumption in new-born rats.

TL;DR: It was decided to determine in more detail the influence of age on minimal O2 consumption, on the neutral environmental temperature at which 02 consumption is minimal, and on the maximal increase in 02 consumption that is observed with cooling.
Journal ArticleDOI

The metabolic rate of the new-born pig in relation to environmental temperature and to age.

TL;DR: The results presented here show that the new-born pig is not poikilothermous and that over the environmental temperature range 4-38° C it exhibits a vigorous metabolic response to cooling of the environment.
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