J Appl Physiol (1985)
August 1986
Severely burned patients are hypermetabolic within their thermoneutral zone (TNZ), where there are no thermoregulatory demands on heat production. The rat has been used as a model of postburn hypermetabolism without clear evidence that it behaves in a similar way. Male rats (400-500 g; n = 34-39) were placed as a group in a respiration chamber and metabolic rates for the average rat were determined over 3-6 h at ambient temperatures between 9 and 36 degrees C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
June 1985
A technique has been developed to record 18O2 dilution curves of an organ in vivo by use of 51Cr-labeled erythrocytes as a reference tracer. The technique employs anaerobic sampling of venous outflow following an intraarterial injection of tracer-laden blood and off-line determination of [18O2] and [51Cr] profiles in the venous outflow. O2 and reference indicator-dilution curves of cerebral circulation were recorded in eight experiments with six halothane-anesthetized dogs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMale Sprague-Dawley rats that received 60% total body surface, full-thickness, scald burns on the dorsum and abdomen were used in this study. Neutral proteinase and Ca2+-activated neutral proteinase activities were measured in gastrocnemius and soleus muscles at 3 and 21 days after the thermal injury. Neutral proteinase activity decreased significantly in the soleus (50%) and gastrocnemius (46%) muscles on the third postburn day.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF