## Abstract Bilateral electrolytic lesions were placed in the dorsomedial hypothalamic nuclei (DMN) of weanling male Sprague‐Dawley rats. Sham‐operated rats served as controls. After 22 days on lab chow and tap water ad libitum, the animals were injected with U‐^14^ C‐alanine 0.167 μC/μ moles intra
Relative normophagia and organ growth in growth-retarded weanling rats with dorsomedial hypothalamic lesions
✍ Scribed by Dr. Lee L. Bernardis; Larry L. Bellinger
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 464 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-4012
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Weanling rats with ventromedial (VMNL) and dorsomedial (DMNL) hypothalamic lesions and sham-operated controls were maintained up t o 198 days after operation. Food intake was measured throughout the experiment and organ weights were recorded at various periods of sacrifice. Comparisons were made between controls and VMNL and DMNL rats, respectively. Food intake and organ weights were expressed in absolute terms and relative t o body mass and Kleiber's "metabolic size." VMNL rats were always normophagic and showed lower organ weights, regardless of manner of computation. Rats with DMNL, on the other hand, were absolutely hypophagic but relatively normophagic for considerable periods of time when food intake was referred to body mass. A similar relationship obtained for organ weights. The data fit well with previous results and with a hypothesis that holds that DMNL bring about a "resetting" of some central nervous control system that not only allows the rat so operated to subsist on lower substrate levels but also regulates normal growth in relation t o body mass.
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## Abstract Dorsomedial hypothalamic lesions (DMNL) were produced in 26‐day‐old and 44‐day‐old male rats. Sham‐operated rats served as controls. Tail‐pinching (TP) was performed for five minutes at a time over two periods: the first TP period of six sessions each from post‐operative day 1 to day 17
## Abstract Weanling rats received bilateral electrolytic lesions in the ventromedial (VMN) or dorsomedial (DMN) hypothalamic nuclei; sham‐operated rats served as controls. The animals were maintained under standard conditions for 13–;17 days post‐operatively and killed by decapitation. In addition
## Abstract Weanling male rats received electrolytic lesions in the ventromedial (VMN) and dorsomedial (DMN) hypothalamic nuclei, respectively. A third group of rats served as sham‐operated controls (CON). After the two hypothalamic syndromes had been well established, the animals were subjected to
## 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