CALORIGENIC RESPONSE OF BURNED RATS WITH ADRENAL MEDULLECTOMIES TO CATECHOLAMINES

Citation
Ft. Caldwell et al., CALORIGENIC RESPONSE OF BURNED RATS WITH ADRENAL MEDULLECTOMIES TO CATECHOLAMINES, The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation, 19(2), 1998, pp. 106-114
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Surgery,Rehabilitation,"Emergency Medicine & Critical Care
ISSN journal
02738481
Volume
19
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
106 - 114
Database
ISI
SICI code
0273-8481(1998)19:2<106:CROBRW>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
In previous studies, we established that circulating epinephrine (E) i s not essential for a normal hypermetabolic response to burn injury in the rat, within the zone of thermal neutrality. In other studies, bur ned rats with adrenal medullectomy (AdxB) studied at 22 degrees C were unable to maintain rectal temperature (T-R) after alpha-adrenergic bl ockage. These data suggest that norepinephrine (NE) is calorigenic in such animals without formal cold acclimation. These studies investigat e the hypothesis that, contrary to the usual belief, norepinephrine mi ght be calorigenic in rats without formal cold acclimation. Burned (B) and control(C) rats with adrenal medullectomies (Adx) and Sham (S) Ad x (AdxB, SAdrB, AdxC, and SAdxC) were housed at either 22 degrees C or 28 degrees C. Calorimetry was performed during the eighth to eleventh days after the burn. For groups housed at 22 degrees C and studied at 28 degrees C, NE given intravenously (iv) produced an average 16.5% /- 3.3% increment in heat production (H-P) for the four groups, which was significant for AdxB, SAdxB, and SAdxC. Intravenous administration of E produced an average increment in H-P, of 4.44% +/- 4.1%, which w as not significant. H-P was significantly higher after NE than E in th ree cases. Studies with animals housed at 280 C and studied at 280 C p roduced intermediate but similar results. For groups housed at 280 C a nd studied at 22 degrees C, iv administration of E and NE produced ave rage decreases in H-P of 18% +/- 6.7% for E and 10.75% +/- 4.7% for NE . Except for the AdxC group, these differences were significant. These data suggest: that chronic exposure to an ambient temperature of 22 d egrees C produces an enhanced calorigenic response to NE in burn and c ontrol rats. Based on the data presented here, combined with earlier s tudies, NE must be considered as a facilitator for hypermetabolic resp onse to burn injury in the rat. It is interesting to speculate whether NE is calorigenic for patients with large burn wounds, which are mana ged without dressings at ambient temperatures below thermal neutrality .