During brain ischemia temperature spontaneously declines. In animal experiments this decline is frequently prevented by stabilizing the temperature at the pre-ischemic level, using an external heat source. The present study examines whether this procedure influences the severity of ischemic injury. Wistar rats were submitted to 30-min four-vessel occlusion followed by 7 days recirculation. During ischemia and the 1st h of recirculation various systemic and electrophysiological variables were recorded. Seven days after the ischemia brains were perfusion-fixed for light microscopical examination. Three brain temperature profiles were compared: spontaneous decline of brain temperature during ischemia from 36 degrees to 31 degrees C (spontaneous hypothermia; n = 5); constant brain temperature of 30 degrees C induced by selective head cooling (induced hypothermia; n = 5); and constant brain temperature of 36 degrees C induced by selective head heating (normothermia; n = 5). Core temperature was maintained constant at 37 degrees C in all groups. In spontaneous hypothermia, 19% of CA1 neurons survived after 30-min ischemia. Induced hypothermia significantly increased this percentage to 69% (P < 0.05); maintenance of brain temperature at normothermia decreased neuronal survival to 1%. Normothermia also led to morphological injury outside the vulnerable regions, an increase in mortality, marked loss of body weight and a prolongation of the electroencephalographic suppression. These findings demonstrate that stabilizing brain temperature at a constant normothermic level by an external heart source introduces an aggravating pathological element that may interfere in an unpredictable way with the manifestation or treatment of ischemic injury.

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