Abstract

The circadian rhythm of cortical temperature registered in the right occipital cortex and the circadian rhythm of motor activity were studied in young and old rats submitted to a chronic malnutrition paradigm. Circadian rhythms of cortical temperature and motor activity in Control (25% casein) and Malnourished (6% casein) Sprague-Dawley male rats were registered by telemetry along different lighting conditions. Results indicate that: (1) there are masking effects of light upon the period of cortical temperature in malnourished-old rats, (2) cortical temperature and motor-activity rhythms, show endogenous periods different from 24-h under free-running conditions, (3) protein malnutrition increases the amplitude and the mean value of cortical-temperature rhythm in malnourished-young rats, (4) aging decreases the amplitude and mean value of the motor-activity rhythm, (5) the acrophase of cortical temperature is delayed in malnourished-old rats, and (6) the temporal relationship between cortical temperature and motor-activity circadian rhythms is altered in malnourished-young and old rats. Therefore, this study provides evidence that protein malnutrition produces long-lasting alterations in the architecture of the circadian system, particularly affecting cortical-temperature oscillation. These changes might indicate thermoregulatory differences in the brain of malnourished rats that could be related to metabolic and behavioral alterations due to protein malnutrition.

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