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Sodium homeostasis in chronic decerebrate rats.
Authors:Grill  Harvey J; Schulkin  Jay; Flynn  Francis W
Abstract:Two experiments examined physiological and behavioral concomitants of sodium need in supracollicularly transected and pair-fed intact male Sprague-Dawley rats. Chronic decerebrate Ss, like intact Ss, reduced their urine sodium output when placed on a sodium-deficient diet. Similarly, 24 hrs after sodium loading, decerebrate and intact Ss excreted comparable levels of the excess sodium. In the 2 hrs immediately following loading, decerebrate Ss excreted less sodium. In contrast, behavioral aspects of sodium homeostasis were completely absent in chronic decerebrate Ss. In separate experiments, intraoral intake and taste-reactivity responses elicited by intraoral infusions of NaCl were measured during sodium-replete and sodium-deficient conditions. In response to oral infusions of NaCl, intact Ss consumed significantly more and produced greater numbers of ingestive taste-reactivity responses when they were sodium deficient than when they were sodium replete. The same sodium-depletion treatments in chronic decerebrate Ss, however, altered neither the intraoral intake of NaCl nor the frequency of NaCl-elicited ingestive taste-reactivity responses. Results suggest that the behavioral compensatory responses that follow changes in the internal sodium state depend on forebrain mechanisms. (53 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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