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  • Title: Cold exposure as a potentiating factor of pineal actions in nonhibernating mammals.
    Author: Sánchez-Barceló EJ, Cos S, Mediavilla MD.
    Journal: Cryobiology; 1986 Feb; 23(1):72-80. PubMed ID: 3956230.
    Abstract:
    Twenty-eight-day-old male rats were used in three experiments to study whether cold exposure potentiates pineal actions in nonhibernating mammals. The following questions were considered: (a) Can cold exposure increase the antigonadal effects of light deprivation? (b) Are the effects induced by blindness plus cold exposure pineal dependent? (c) Can cold exposure modify the response of the endocrine-reproductive axis to exogenously administered melatonin? Blind cold-exposed rats showed a significant loss in body weight as well as in weights of pituitary and reproductive tract organs compared with either intact or blind animals kept at 22 degrees C, or intact rats exposed to cold; serum testosterone levels were also lowest in blind cold-exposed rats. These effects were not present in blind cold-exposed animals that were pinealectomized at the beginning of the experiment. When intact animals placed at 22 or 10 degrees C were treated with daily injections of melatonin (50 micrograms) there was a reduction of body weight and weights of the hypophyso-gonadal axis organs. Those effects of melatonin were, however, significantly greater in cold-exposed rats than in rats placed at 22 degrees C. These results suggest that cold exposure should be considered as another state which potentiates the pineal-dependent actions of light deprivation. Cold exposure probably acts by increasing the sensitivity of sites at which pineal melatonin exerts its actions.
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