Abstract

Systemic and central administration of methacholine (a synthetic choline derivative) both produced dose-dependent decreases in rectal temperature in rats at all the ambient temperatures studied. Both at room temperature (22 degrees C) and in the cold (8 degrees C), the hypothermia in response to methacholine application was brought about by both a decrease in metabolic heat production and an increase in cutaneous circulation. In the heat (29 degrees C), the hypothermia was due solely to an increase in respiratory evaporative heat loss. Furthermore, the methacholine-induced hypothermia was antagonized by central pretreatment of atropine (a selective blocker of cholinergic receptors), but not by the central administration of either 6-hydroxydopamine (a relative depletor of catecholaminergic nerve fibers) or 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine (predominately a serotonin depletor). The data indicate that activation of the cholinergic receptors within brain with methacholine decreases heat production and (or) increases heat loss which leads to hypothermia in rats.

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