Rowe-Murphy D L, van Tienhoven A, Scott N R, Hillman P E, Wood C L, Johnson A L, Schwark W S
Am J Physiol. 1980 Sep;239(3):R296-302. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.1980.239.3.R296.
Intraventricular implants of pimozide in adult white leghorn hens were used to block dopamine (DA) receptors, and 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) was injected intraventricularly to destroy the noradrenergic system locally. The hens were exposed to ambient temperatures of 5 and 35 degrees C, and their core temperature was measured. One hundred micrograms of 6-OHDA significantly reduced the norepinephrine (NE) but not the DA content of the hypothalamus and reduced the uptake of [3H]NE but not of [3H]DA by synaptosomes in vitro. Neither of the drug treatments nor their combination affected average core body temperature (Tb) at either 5 or 35 degrees C. Pimozide treatment caused a lower maximum Tb at 35 degrees C and a higher maximum Tb at 5 degrees C than the control treatment. No evidence was obtained that 6-OHDA treatment affected body temperature regulation. It is concluded that neither the DA nor the NE system is essential for normal temperature maintenance in the hen exposed to either 5 or 35 degrees C.