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Cardiac dynamics during daily torpor in the Djungarian hamster (Phodopus sungorus). | LitMetric

Cardiac dynamics during daily torpor in the Djungarian hamster (Phodopus sungorus).

Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol

Fractal Physiology, Max Planck Institute for Experimental Medicine, Hermann Rein Strasse 3, Göttingen, Germany.

Published: February 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • Djunganian hamsters enter a state of daily torpor when exposed to short days, reducing their metabolic rate and body temperature significantly.
  • During this torpor phase, they experience notably low heart rates, yet they show resilience against arrhythmias, maintaining stable ECG readings.
  • The study highlights that their heart conduction times are affected by low temperatures, indicating complex physiological responses during torpor and arousal, particularly involving sympathetic stimulation.

Article Abstract

Djungarian or Siberian hamsters (Phodopus sungorus) acclimated to short photoperiod display episodes of spontaneous daily torpor with metabolic rate depressed by approximately 70% and body temperature (T(b)) reduced by approximately 20 degrees C. To study the cardiovascular adjustment to daily torpor in Phodopus, electrocardiogram (ECG) and T(b) were continuously recorded by telemetry during entrance into torpor, in deep torpor, and during arousal from torpor. Minimum T(b) during torpor bouts was approximately 21 degrees C, and heart rate, approximately 349 beats/min at euthermy, displayed marked sinus bradyarrhythmia at approximately 70 beats/min. Arousal was typically completed within approximately 40 min, followed by a sustained post-torpor inactivity tachycardia ( approximately 540 beats/min). The absence of episodes of conduction block, tachyarrhythmia, or other forms of ectopy throughout the torpor cycle demonstrates a remarkable resistance to arrhythmogenesis. The ECG morphology lacks a distinct isoelectric interval following the QRS complex, and the ST segment resembles the ECG pattern in mice, with a prominent fast transient outward K(+) current (I(to,f)) determining the early phase of ventricular repolarization. During low-temperature torpor, the amplitudes of the QRS complex substantially increased, suggesting that in the euthermic state the terminal portion of ventricular depolarization is fused with the beginning of repolarization, low T(b) acting to decorrelate the superposition between depolarization and repolarization by delaying the repolarization onset. Atrioventricular and ventricular conduction times were prolonged as function of T(b). In contrast, the QT vs. T(b) relationship showed marked hysteresis indicating the operation of nonlinear control mechanisms whereby the rapid QT shortening during arousal results from additional mechanisms (probably sympathetic stimulation) other than temperature alone.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00496.2007DOI Listing

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