Exposure to psychological stress increases body temperature (Tb). This stress fever may be immunologically beneficial in some patient populations but detrimental in others (e.g., HIV-infected individuals). For this reason, it is desirable to determine pharmacological methods of preventing stress fever. In rats, stress fever is modeled by exposure to a novel environment or 'open field.' The beta-adrenergic antagonists, nadolol and propranolol, block this stress fever. Neither of these beta-antagonists discriminates between subtypes of beta-receptors. The purpose of this study was to determine the relative contribution of the different beta-receptor types to stress fever using beta1-, beta2-, and beta3-receptor subtype selective antagonists (atenolol [beta1], ICI-118551 [beta2], and SR 59230A [beta3]) and agonists (dobutamine [beta1], salbutamol [beta2], and BRL 37344 [beta3]) on the Tb of rats. Tb was measured with a biotelemetry system. Our data suggest that central nervous system beta-receptor blockade with subtype-selective antagonists prevents the stress-induced rise in Tb; however, the beta3-antagonist was effective only at doses that produced hypothermia in a non-stressed control group. The stress-induced fever was mimicked by central nervous system administration of the selective beta2-agonist, salbutamol, and the beta3-agonist, BRL 37344. We hypothesize that the blockade of stress-induced fever by beta-blockers may be due to the sedative actions of these drugs.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000026389DOI Listing

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