Korean J Intern Med.
2000 Jul;15(2):103-108.
Lack of integrative control of body temperature after capsaicin administration
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Internal Medicine, Chonnam University Medical School, Kwangju, Korea.
- 2National Institute of Health and Nutrition, Tokyo, Japan.
Abstract
- BACKGROUND
Body temperature is usually regulated by opposing controls of heat
production and heat loss. However, systemic administration of capsaicin, the
pungent ingredient of hot peppers, facilitated heat production and heat loss
simultaneously in rats. We recently found that the capsaicin-induced heat loss
and heat production occur simultaneously and that the biphasic change in body
temperature is a sum of transient heat loss and long-lasting heat production.
Moreover, suppression of the heat loss response did not affect capsaicin-induced
heat production and suppression of heat production did not affect
capsaicin-induced heat loss. These observations suggest the independent
peripheral mechanisms of capsaicin-induced thermal responses. Thus, the
capsaicin-induced thermal responses apparently lack an integrated control.
METHODS: Male Wistar rats were maintained at an ambient temperature of 24 1
degrees C on a 12 h on-off lighting schedule at least for two weeks before the
experiments. They were anesthetized with urethane (1.5 g/kg, i.p.) and placed on
a heating pad, which was kept between 29 and 30 degrees C. Skin temperature(Ts)
was measured with a small thermistor, which was taped to the dorsal surface of
the rat's tail, to assess vasoactive changes indirectly. Colonic temperature(Tc)
was measured with another thermistor inserted about 60 mm into the anus. O2
consumption was measured by the open-circuit method, and values were corrected
for metabolic body size (kg0.75). Capsaicin (Sigma) was dissolved in a solution
comprising 80+ACU- saline, 10+ACU- Tween 80, and 10+ACU- ethanol, and injected
subcutaneously at a dose of 5 mg/kg. Each rat received a single injection of
capsaicin because repeated administration of capsaicin renders an animal
insensitive to the subsequent administration of capsaicin. Laminectomy was
performed at the level of the first and second cervical vertebrae to expose the
cervical spinal cord for sectioning. The brain was transected at 4-mm rostral
from the interaural line with an L-shaped knife. RESULTS: After administration
of capsaicin, O2 consumption increased from 13.5 0.4 mL/min/kg0.75 at 0 min
to a peak of 15.9 0.4 mL/min/kg0.75 at 71 min and gradually declined but
remained higher than the basal value until the end of the 4-h observation
period. Ts also immediately increased from 27.7 0.2 degrees C to 31.9
0.3 degrees C at 39 min, and it returned to the baseline level within 90 min
after the capsaicin administration. Tc initially decreased from 37.1 0.1
degrees C to 36.8 0.2 degrees C at 43 min and then gradually increased over
the baseline level and remained at 37.6 0.2 degrees C until the end of the
experiment. In spinalized rats, the capsaicin-induced increases in O2
consumption was largely attenuated, while the basal O2 consumption was similar
to that of control rats. The basal Ts of spinalized rats was 32.4 0.3
degrees C, which was higher than that of control rats. Capsaicin increased Ts by
less than 1 degree C, and Tc did not change after the capsaicin administration.
O2 consumption of decerebrated rats was statistically higher than that of
control rats after the injection of capsaicin. However, capsaicin did not
increase Ts, showing a lack of a vasodilatory response. Decerebration between
the hypothalamus and midbrain prevented the capsaicin-induced heat loss but not
the heat production response. CONCLUSION: These results show that the
capsaicin-induced heat production and heat loss are controlled separately by the
brainstem and by the forebrain, respectively, and suggest that the body
temperature regulation is performed without an integrative center.