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THERMOREGULATORY CHANGES INDUCED BY CHOLINOMIMETIC SUBSTANCES INTRODUCED INTO THE CEREBRAL VENTRICLES OF SHEEP
Author(s) -
JOHNSON K.G.
Publication year - 1975
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1975.tb07385.x
Subject(s) - physostigmine , oxotremorine , shivering , atropine , carbachol , thermoregulation , cholinergic , chemistry , acetylcholine , muscarinic acetylcholine receptor , endocrinology , medicine , anesthesia , pharmacology , receptor , stimulation
1 Thermoregulatory responses have been recorded from Welsh Mountain sheep exposed to warm, neutral or cold environments while injections of cholinomimetic drugs and/or their antagonists have been given into a lateral cerebral ventricle. 2 Carbachol and physostigmine inhibited panting of animals at high ambient temperature ( t a ), caused vasoconstriction and initiated shivering at neutral t a , and accentuated shivering at low t a . Rectal temperature ( t re ) invariably increased. Oxotremorine had apparently identical effects. 3 Nicotine and another ganglionic stimulant, the quaternary methyl derivative of dopamine, had no effects on thermoregulation. 4 Atropine given 10 min before injections of carbachol, physostigmine or oxotremorine completely inhibited their hyperthermic effects, but pretreatment with the ganglion‐blocking drug, pempidine, caused no inhibition. The cholinergic synapses that respond to cholinomimetic drugs injected into the lateral cerebral ventricles of sheep are therefore muscarinic and not nicotinic. 5 When atropine was given to sheep exposed to cold, no detectable reduction of shivering occurred and t re decreased only slightly, even with doses of atropine far greater than needed to inhibit shivering induced by physostigmine. This may be because shivering is controlled by neural pathways unaffected by drugs administered intracerebroventricularly or because the cholinergic synapses activated by physostigmine do not carry the input from cold sensors.