For more than 100-year history of studying hypothermia a rewarming of a cooled organism was always considered as the only method of restoring the cold-paralysed physiological functions and the vital activity of an overcooled organism of homoiothermal animals and humans. The paper gives the results of applying the method developed at our Laboratory, of restoring the cold-paralysed important physiological functions after a continuous cooling of rats, without rewarming the animals.
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Ross Fiziol Zh Im I M Sechenova
June 2000
I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Russian Acad. Sci., St. Petersburg, Russia.
For more than 100-year history of studying hypothermia a rewarming of a cooled organism was always considered as the only method of restoring the cold-paralysed physiological functions and the vital activity of an overcooled organism of homoiothermal animals and humans. The paper gives the results of applying the method developed at our Laboratory, of restoring the cold-paralysed important physiological functions after a continuous cooling of rats, without rewarming the animals.
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