Repeated exposure to heating sessions (30 min at 39°C for 4 consecutive days) reduced the lethal effects of hyperthermia (heating session of 30 min at 43°C, 43.5°C, 44.3°C) in mice, as compared to untretead controls. A similar, but less marked reduction of heat-induces lethality was observed in restraint mice. The data suggest the existence of biological mechanisms that are activated following repeated exposure to heating and sttress.
Short term tolerance to lethal effects of total body hyperthermia in mice / DE FEO, Giuseppe; R., Lisciani; G., Orticelli; A., Del Vecchio; Mazzanti, Gabriela; Silvestrini, Bruno. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY. - ISSN 0014-2999. - STAMPA. - 183:(1990), pp. 237-238. (Intervento presentato al convegno XIth International congress of pharmacology tenutosi a Amsterdams, Netherlands nel 2 July, 1990).
Short term tolerance to lethal effects of total body hyperthermia in mice
DE FEO, Giuseppe;MAZZANTI, Gabriela;SILVESTRINI, Bruno
1990
Abstract
Repeated exposure to heating sessions (30 min at 39°C for 4 consecutive days) reduced the lethal effects of hyperthermia (heating session of 30 min at 43°C, 43.5°C, 44.3°C) in mice, as compared to untretead controls. A similar, but less marked reduction of heat-induces lethality was observed in restraint mice. The data suggest the existence of biological mechanisms that are activated following repeated exposure to heating and sttress.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.