Abstract

The circadian rhythm of body temperature (CTR) of male and female rats living at 23°C, as well as their body temperature response to a yeast injection or to a 2-h exposure to 0°C, was investigated by telemetry. Young rats had a clear CTR with a mean nocturnal peak of 38.0 ± 0.1°C and diurnal trough of 36.2 ± 0.1°C. Older rats, starting at about 18 months of age, tended to have poor (that is, lower amplitude) rhythms. Mean daily body temperature was 37.1 ± 0.2°C at all ages. After exposure to the cold, the body temperature of young rats, old rats with a strong CTR, and old rats with a poor CTR changed in the ranges of −0.3 to +1.5°C, −3.1 to +0.7°C, and −5.2 to +0.4°C, respectively. This indicates that old animals, especially but not exclusively those with poor CTRs, are less resistant to cold stress. On the other hand, the capacity to develop a fever in response to a yeast injection was equivalent in the three groups of animals, although females had a smaller response than males. It is concluded that the process of aging does not have a generalized debilitating effect on temperature regulation in rats. Rather, aging seems to affect individual components of the thermoregulatory system differentially.

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