Abstract

The effects of cold exposure on the release of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and catecholamines as estimated by push-pull perfusion of the mediobasal hypothalamus were studied. Before cold exposure, the male rats had been kept at room temperature or at 30 degrees C for 3 weeks. Transfer to 4 degrees C increased plasma levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), but this cold-induced TSH response was more pronounced in animals which had been acclimatized to 30 degrees C. Exposure to 4 degrees C also increased plasma thyroid hormone levels, but had no effect on plasma prolactin. The hypothalamic content of TRH and dopamine remained similar after transfer to 4 degrees C, but after 6 h of cold, the content of noradrenaline and adrenaline had increased 1.6-fold and 3-fold, respectively. In vivo hypothalamic release of TRH, adrenaline and dopamine remained similar during a 2-hour period in control rats kept at room temperature or 30 degrees C. The hypothalamic release of TRH, dopamine and adrenaline did not change in rats transferred from room temperature to 4 degrees C. The amount of dopamine and adrenaline in push-pull perfusate also remained similar in rats acclimatized to 30 degrees C after transfer to low temperatures. However, in these rats kept at 30 degrees C for 3 weeks, exposure to 4 degrees C increased TRH release in perfusate from the mediobasal hypothalamus in the first 15 min of cold exposure (2-fold increase). Thus, exposure to cold stimulates the hypothalamo-pituitary-thyroid axis and increases the hypothalamic release of TRH in rats which had been acclimatized to 30 degrees C.

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