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Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role.

We have reviewed the evidence in favor of a prostaglandin mediator of the thermal responses in fever and found that PGE injected into the hypothalamus does not always cause fever, that cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of PGE are not reliable reflections of hypothalamic events, and that antipyretic...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mitchell, D., Laburn, H. P., Cooper, K. E., Hellon, R. F., Cranston, W. I., Townsend, Y.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1986
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2590132/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3739373
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author Mitchell, D.
Laburn, H. P.
Cooper, K. E.
Hellon, R. F.
Cranston, W. I.
Townsend, Y.
author_facet Mitchell, D.
Laburn, H. P.
Cooper, K. E.
Hellon, R. F.
Cranston, W. I.
Townsend, Y.
author_sort Mitchell, D.
collection PubMed
description We have reviewed the evidence in favor of a prostaglandin mediator of the thermal responses in fever and found that PGE injected into the hypothalamus does not always cause fever, that cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of PGE are not reliable reflections of hypothalamic events, and that antipyretic drugs may act in ways other than inhibiting PGE synthesis. Fever is not blocked by prostaglandin antagonists, nor by ablation of PGE-sensitive areas of the brain. There is poor correlation between the effects of pyrogens and of PGE on cerebral neurons. There is evidence that at least one prostanoid other than prostaglandin is a mediator of fever, but the prostanoid has not been identified yet. We conclude that PGE may contribute to the neural responses in fever but is not essential.
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spelling pubmed-25901322008-11-28 Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role. Mitchell, D. Laburn, H. P. Cooper, K. E. Hellon, R. F. Cranston, W. I. Townsend, Y. Yale J Biol Med Research Article We have reviewed the evidence in favor of a prostaglandin mediator of the thermal responses in fever and found that PGE injected into the hypothalamus does not always cause fever, that cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of PGE are not reliable reflections of hypothalamic events, and that antipyretic drugs may act in ways other than inhibiting PGE synthesis. Fever is not blocked by prostaglandin antagonists, nor by ablation of PGE-sensitive areas of the brain. There is poor correlation between the effects of pyrogens and of PGE on cerebral neurons. There is evidence that at least one prostanoid other than prostaglandin is a mediator of fever, but the prostanoid has not been identified yet. We conclude that PGE may contribute to the neural responses in fever but is not essential. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1986 /pmc/articles/PMC2590132/ /pubmed/3739373 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Mitchell, D.
Laburn, H. P.
Cooper, K. E.
Hellon, R. F.
Cranston, W. I.
Townsend, Y.
Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role.
title Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role.
title_full Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role.
title_fullStr Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role.
title_full_unstemmed Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role.
title_short Is prostaglandin E the neural mediator of the febrile response? The case against a proven obligatory role.
title_sort is prostaglandin e the neural mediator of the febrile response? the case against a proven obligatory role.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2590132/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3739373
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