Production of the weanling rat dorsomedial hypothalamic syndrome by cathodal electrolytic lesion current
✍ Scribed by Dr. Lee L. Bernardis; Jack K. Goldman
- Book ID
- 102385611
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 479 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-4012
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Weanling male Sprague‐Dawley rats received bilateral electrolytic lesions in the dorsomedial hypothalamic area by means of a direct cathodal current. Sham‐operated rats served as controls. Ponderal and linear growth, obesity index, food intake, and several indices of intermediary metabolims of adipose tissue and muscle were measured. Cathodal lesions, as did anodal lesions reported on previously, resulted in retardation of body weight, length, and food intake, while the obesity index remained in the normal range. Similarly, the metabolic data in adipose tissue and muscle are comparable to those from experiments in which dorsomedial lesions were placed by anodal current: incorporation of glucose into CO~2~, lipid, and glycogen of muscle tissue (diaphragm) were similar in DMN‐lesioned rats and controls. The difference between anodal and cathodal lesions in this hypothalamic syndrome is a delay in the onset of hypophagia until about 30 days after the hypothalamic operation. The data support the concept that lesions in the hypothalamus, in general, exert their effect by destruction of neuronal assemblies, i.e., nerve cells and/or fiber tracts passing through the lesioned area.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Male rats received bilateral electrolytic lesions shortly after weaning in the ventromedial (VMN) and dorsomedial (DMN) hypothalamic nuclei, respectively. A third group of rats served as sham‐operated controls. The animals were subjected to intragastric preloading with 33% d‐glucose and
## SIX FIGURES Thc production of hypothalamic obesity in the rat is an easy matter, requiring only that certain definite regions on both sides of the hypothalamus be destroyed. Work in this laboratory has been directed toward the identification of the precise structures, either nuclei or fiber gro