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We compared body temperature patterns and selective brain cooling (SBC) in eight adult female sheep in an indoor (22-25 °C) and outdoor (mean ~ 21 °C) environment, by measuring brain, carotid arterial, and jugular venous blood temperatures at 5-min intervals using implanted data loggers. To investigate whether ultradian oscillations in brain temperature had thermoregulatory consequences for the sheep, we determined the cranial arterio-venous (AV) temperature difference as an indicator of respiratory evaporative heat loss (REHL). The 24-h pattern of SBC was similar in both environments, despite carotid blood temperature fluctuating 0.4 °C more outdoors compared to indoors. The sheep employed SBC more often during the night than during the day, but SBC was abolished at intervals of 1-3 h throughout the 24-h period. The suppression of SBC appeared to be associated with events that increased sympathetic nervous system activity, including shifts between stages of sleep. Short-term changes (over 5-min) in brain temperature were positively correlated with changes in the AV temperature difference 5 min later, and negatively correlated with changes in carotid temperature 10 min later. These data support the idea that increases in brain temperature modulate thermoregulation by increasing REHL, which leads to a decrease in carotid blood temperature. Ultradian oscillations in core temperature of sheep, therefore, appear to arise as a consequence of frequent brain temperature changes invoked by non-thermal inputs, in animals housed both in indoor and outdoor environments.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00360-019-01248-2 | DOI Listing |
Int J Hyperthermia
December 2025
Department of Radiation Oncology Physics, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Objective: To develop a deep learning method for fast and accurate prediction of Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) distributions in the human head to support real-time hyperthermia treatment planning (HTP) of brain cancer patients.
Approach: We propose an encoder-decoder neural network with cross-attention blocks to predict SAR maps from brain electrical properties, tumor 3D isocenter coordinates and microwave antenna phase settings. A dataset of 201 simulations was generated using finite-element modeling by varying tissue properties, tumor positions, and antenna phases within a human head model equipped with a three-ring phased-array applicator.
Mol Ecol
September 2025
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Many ant species show dramatic shifts in behaviour when infected with parasites, but the molecular basis of these behavioural changes is not well understood. An example is the wood ant, Formica aserva, which serves as an intermediate host for the lancet liver fluke, Dicrocoelium dendriticum. Infected ants leave their nests during the cool hours of the day, ascend a flower and then attach themselves to a petal with their mandibles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedicine (Baltimore)
September 2025
Department of Emergency Medicine, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, South Korea.
This study aimed to investigate the clinical course of brain death donors and admitted through the emergency department before organ procurement and early outcomes of kidney transplantation. We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of patients who visited a single tertiary emergency department with the final diagnosis of brain death and donor procurement between January 2013 and January 2022. Donors were categorized into 3 groups: brain hemorrhage, hanging, and other medical causes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedicine (Baltimore)
September 2025
Emergency Department, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Shandong First Medical University, Tai'an, China.
Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is a severe and often fatal brain disorder. Despite the recognition of dietary adjustments as a preventive measure, there is a need for well-designed studies to investigate the dietary factors of ICH patients. We employed Mendelian randomization to explore the relationship between 35 dietary factors (exposures) and ICH (outcome).
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