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Cold-acclimation improves cold-tolerance of diabetic rats

Journal article published in 1987 by Jesus A. Ferro, Marcos Macari ORCID, Décio L. Eizirik
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.

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Abstract

1. The aim of these experiments was to study the extent to which previous cold-acclimation improves the cold-tolerance of diabetic rats. 2. Alloxan diabetic rats (fasting blood glucose higher than 200 mg/dl) were used in the experiments. 3. In Expt. 1, non-cold-acclimated control and diabetic rats were exposed to cold environment (7-9 degrees C), and the percentage of survival calculated during a 12-day experimental period. In Expt. 2, the rats were previously cold-acclimated before alloxan or saline injection (diabetic and control cold-acclimated rats) and the survival rate was also assessed during a 12-day period in the cold. 4. The percentage of survival of the non-cold-acclimated diabetic rats (Expt.1) was 19% compared with 79% of the diabetic cold-acclimated animals (Expt. 2). There were no deaths in the control groups. 5. Cold-acclimated diabetic rats maintained a near-normal thermogenic response after noradrenaline injection. This response was impaired in non-cold-acclimated diabetic rats. 6. The results of these experiments suggest that the enhanced cold-tolerance of diabetic cold-acclimated rats could be related to the increased sympathetic activity and enhanced insulin sensitivity in thermogenic tissues, such as brown fat. ; Comparative Study ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; info:eu-repo/semantics/published