Cold-induced shivering in men with thermoneutral skin temperatures

1976 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 142-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. G. Buguet ◽  
S. D. Livingstone ◽  
L. D. Reed ◽  
R. E. Limmer

Twenty-two male Caucasians, aged 20–47 yr, were exposed in a cold room to air temperatures of -33 degrees C while lying in sleeping bags for 2 h. Skin and rectal temperatures as well as electromyographic activity of the chin, forearm, and thigh, were recorded. Shivering occurred in all the subjects, even though skin temperatures were maintained between 31 and 33 degrees C. It is suggested that a counter-current heat exchange occurs whereby the warm blood of the common carotid artery is cooled by cool venous blood in the jugular veins. This cooled arterial blood, in irrigating the hypothalamus, causes shivering.

2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 20150592 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Davenport ◽  
T. Todd Jones ◽  
Thierry M. Work ◽  
George H. Balazs

Counter-current heat exchangers associated with appendages of endotherms feature bundles of closely applied arteriovenous vessels. The accepted paradigm is that heat from warm arterial blood travelling into the appendage crosses into cool venous blood returning to the body. High core temperature is maintained, but the appendage functions at low temperature. Leatherback turtles have elevated core temperatures in cold seawater and arteriovenous plexuses at the roots of all four limbs. We demonstrate that plexuses of the hindlimbs are situated wholly within the hip musculature, and that, at the distal ends of the plexuses, most blood vessels supply or drain the hip muscles, with little distal vascular supply to, or drainage from the limb blades. Venous blood entering a plexus will therefore be drained from active locomotory muscles that are overlaid by thick blubber when the adults are foraging in cold temperate waters. Plexuses maintain high limb muscle temperature and avoid excessive loss of heat to the core, the reverse of the accepted paradigm. Plexuses protect the core from overheating generated by muscular thermogenesis during nesting.


1986 ◽  
Vol 108 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Dagan ◽  
S. Weinbaum ◽  
L. M. Jiji

The new three-layer microvascular mathematical model for surface tissue heat transfer developed in [1, 2], which is based on detailed vascular casts and tissue temperature measurements in the rabbit thigh, is used to investigate the thermal characteristics of surface tissue under a wide variety of physiological conditions. Studies are carried out to examine the effects of vascular configuration, arterial blood supply rate, distribution of capillary perfusion, cutaneous blood circulation and metabolic heat production on the average tissue temperature profile, the local arterial-venous blood temperature difference in the thermally significant counter-current vessels, and surface heat flux.


1963 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 970-974 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Malcolm Brown ◽  
Robert E. Semple ◽  
C. S. Lennox ◽  
G. S. Bird ◽  
C. W. Baugh

Skin, muscle, and rectal temperatures, and O2 consumption of Eskimos and Caucasians have been compared during an acute cold exposure involving immersion of one hand and forearm in a 5 C water bath. The Eskimos consumed less O2, maintained their rectal temperatures at a higher level, and gave up less heat from the muscles of the limbs. Though the Eskimos had significantly more adipose tissue, average skin temperatures were the same in the two groups. The pattern of temperatures noted now and the previously observed higher blood flow in the hand and forearm of Eskimos point to increased cooling of arterial blood by returning venous blood in the extremities with resultant preservation of heat in the body core. Submitted on August 6, 1962


1953 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 274-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. GINSBURG ◽  
H. HELLER

1. The antidiuretic potencies of blood, serum and plasma obtained from various parts of the cardiovascular system of rats were compared. 2. External jugular blood was found to have higher activity than blood from the other sites. After hypophysectomy the antidiuretic potency of external jugular blood was much diminished. 3. The antidiuretic activity of hepatic and renal venous blood was lower than that of arterial blood, suggesting that antidiuretic hormone is removed from blood during passage through the splanchnic vascular area or the kidneys, or both. 4. The antidiuretic potency of blood was shown to increase with the volume of blood withdrawn. 5. Ether anaesthesia increased the antidiuretic activity of external jugular blood. 6. The antidiuretic activity of carotid serum when given subcutaneously was higher than that of carotid plasma. This difference was not seen after intravenous injections. 7. In sheep and in mice, plasma of blood from the external jugular veins had more antidiuretic effect than plasma from other sites.


1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (6) ◽  
pp. H2757-H2764 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. I. Anderson ◽  
O. Hudlicka ◽  
M. D. Brown

Increased activity of ischemic skeletal muscles in which functional hyperemia is impaired has been linked with capillary endothelial swelling postcapillary white blood cell (WBC) adherence. The perfusion pattern of capillaries under these conditions and time course of WBC activation is not known. Capillary microcirculation was studied by videomicroscopy at rest and after muscle contractions (1 Hz, 10 min) in extensor digi-torum longus muscles of pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized rat during the early stages of chronic ischemia (unilateral ligation of the common iliac artery for 3 days) and in ischemic muscles subjected to increased activity (7 days of ischemia or 3 days of ischemia plus indirect electrical stimulation via planted electrodes, 10 Hz, 7 x 10 min on-90 min off/day) to investigate how perfusion was affected. All ischemic muscles had more intermittently flowing capillaries than did unoperated control) muscles. Temporal heterogeneity of perfusion at rest, assessed by velocity, time spent stationary, and stop/start frequency of red blood cells, was similar to control values in ischemic muscles but greater in ischemic muscles subjected to additional activity. Hyperemic responses to contractions were severely blunted in all ischemic groups. The portion of morphologically nonspherical WBCs, taken to indicate activation, was 24 +/- 3% in venous blood after 3 days of ischemia vs. 14 +/- 1% in control muscles and increased further by 7 days (42 +/- 2%) when activated cells were also found in arterial blood. Thus increased muscular activity may exacerbate the adverse effects of ischemia on capillary perfusion, and WBC activation, evident before endothelial swelling is apparent, provides the potential as a circulating signal for capillary swelling in the ischemic and other muscles.


Reproduction ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Einer-Jensen ◽  
RHF Hunter

Heat and substances, including gases, steroids and peptide hormones, can pass from venous blood, interstitial fluid and lymph to the arterial blood; the process is called local counter-current transfer. It has been found in various reproductive organs in many animal species and in man: from the testis to the testis and epididymis; from the ovary to the ovary, tube and tubal corner of the uterus; from the tube and uterus to the ovary; from vagina to uterus; and even between brain blood vessels. Local transfer within the ovary has also been found. Local cooling that creates temperature gradients between organs or within an organ is one aspect of the transfer. Physiologically, the transfer also facilitates local feedback regulation of organ function in a process situated between general distribution of hormones through the systemic circulation and paracrine regulation. Counter-current transfer of drugs after local application opens up new possibilities for treatment.


1966 ◽  
Vol 16 (01/02) ◽  
pp. 032-037 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Ogston ◽  
C. M Ogston ◽  
N. B Bennett

Summary1. The concentration of the major components of the fibrinolytic enzyme system was compared in venous and arterial blood samples from male subjects.2. The plasminogen activator concentration was higher in venous blood and the arterio-venous difference increased as its concentration rose, but the ratio of the arterial to venous level remained constant.3. No arterio-venous difference was found for anti-urokinase activity, antiplasmin, plasminogen and fibrinogen.4. It is concluded that venous blood determinations of the components of the fibrinolytic enzyme system reflect satisfactorily arterial blood levels.


Author(s):  
A. G. Belova ◽  
E. V. Zimina ◽  
N. P. Simbirtsev

During a pathoanatomic autopsy, it is very important to correctly assess the color change of the organs. However, it is not always clear because the color depends on the spectrum of the incident light. There is also a subjective assessment of color. In addition, in animals with large amounts of circulating blood, for example, dogs, early imbibition occurs, which makes it difficult to assess the color of the organ and pathoanatomical diagnosis. We have proposed a simple and visual method of recognition of two pathological processes – inflammation and edema using colored filters. This technique also allows to accurately differentiate inflammation from postmortem imbibition, to recognize fibrin and hemorrhage well. Postmortem examination of different types of animals (predacious families of mustelids, canids, felids) was performed in accordance with Shore’s method in the prosectorium of the Pathonomy Department, K.I. Skryabin Moscow State Academy of Veterinary Medicine and Biotechnology visual analysis – under various artificial lights (fluorescent lamps with banded spectrum and halogen lamps). In the red filter are well identified the pathological processes associated with the venous blood presence in the tissues (venous hyperemia and pulmonary edema). The focus of venous hyperemia or edema in the red filter looks like a dark zone, and tissues, where arterial bloods predominated, aren’t detected in red filter. In the yellow – green filter the inflammation is clearly detected: the zone is brightly red and surrounding tissues become dark. Red colour filters have rather narrow band of transmittance from 600 to 700 nm. Yellow-green have a width zone – from 500 to 700 nm, including both red, and yellow-green part of spectrum. Oxidized hemoglobin in red part of spectrum absorbs ten time weaker, has more high reflectivity and looks red. Surrounding tissues reflect the red rays, which incident on them also red. Therefore, the zone of edema, venous hyperemia and hemorrhaging, containing venous blood, are detected the dark spot, and inflammation zone merges with the red background. Oxidized hemoglobin in the red spectrum part absorbs ten time weaker than reduced hemoglobin, has high reflectivity of the red spectrum part and looks brightly red, surrounding tissues reflect yellow-green spectrum part and look green. Therefore, the zones of inflammation, active hyperemia and hemorrhaging, containing arterial blood, sharp contrast with green background and are clearly visible. Diagnoses made with the help of color filters are confirmed by histological studies.


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