Hypothalamic control of food intake in cats and monkeys.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The role of the central nervous system in regulating food intake was probably suggested first by the discovery that either obesity or emaciation may occur in patients with nervous diseases. For a while these observations were not properly evaluated, because emphasis was laid upon the obesity as such, or the leanness, rather than upon the changed eating habits responsible for the clinical picture. Interest was focused on the hypothalamic region by the experimental studies of many workers (Hetherington, 1941; Hetherington & Ranson, 1940, 1942 a, b; Brobeck, Tepperman & Long, 1943; Kennedy, 1950; Ranson, Fisher & Ingram, 1938) who showed that bilateral lesions in the medial hypothalamus, especially lesions in or ventro-lateral to the ventromedial nucleus, resulted in obesity. The confusion introduced by the notion that pituitary disturbances caused obesity was also clarified by Hetherington (1943), who showed that the hypophysis is in no way directly concerned with the pathogenesis of obesity following injury to the base of brain. Brobeck et al. (1943) demonstrated that this hypothalamic obesity was due to increased food intake (hypothalamic hyperphagia) rather than to disturbances in the fat, carbohydrate or intermediary metabolism. From the time of its discovery this hyperphagia was assumed to be a release phenomenon brought about through the destruction of an inhibitory mechanism. The existence of another mechanism in the lateral hypothalamus of the rat, which controls the 'instinct' or the 'urge' to eat, was demonstrated by Anand & Brobeck (1951 a, b). They showed that bilateral destruction of a well localized area in the lateral hypothalamus, at the same rostro-caudal level as the ventro-medial nucleus, produces complete aphagia and death due to starvation, in spite of the availability of food. It was also observed that of the two mechanisms the lateral one exerts the more basic type of control over food intake and the medial one (inhibitory) produces its effects only when the lateral
منابع مشابه
Hypothalamic Control of Food Intake in Rats and Cats *
Marked variations in food intake have been described in various species following injury to certain parts of the hypothalamus, including an increased food intake or hyperphagia caused by lesions in the medial hypothalamus, especially lesions in or ventrolateral to the ventromedial nucleus; this hyperphagia leads to obesity."1418' 20 24 A decrease or complete inhibition of food intake has also b...
متن کاملVENTROMEDIAL HYPOTHALAMIC NUCLEI AND FEEDING BEHAVIOR
The role of the ventromedial nuclei of the hypothalamus (VMN) in food behavior was studied in adult male rats, allocated in 3 groups: control, sham and lesioned. Electrolytic lesions were induced stereotaxically (1.2 mA, 15 sec). Results revealed a significant decrease (p<O.05) in body weight (BW) and food intake (FI) in the order of lesioned <sham <control during the fIrst week. However, ...
متن کاملChoice of Diets of Differing Caloric Density by Normal and Hyperphagic Rats.
When bilateral lesions are made in the ventromedial nuclei of the hypothalamus, striking and characteristic changes are produced. These effects, first demonstrated in the rat, include an enormous increase in food intake (hyperphagia) and the development of obesity (Hetherington & Ranson, 1939; Brobeck, Tepperman & Long, 1943). The hyperphagia occurs immediately after the operation, the rat eati...
متن کاملThe effects of lateral hypothalamic lesions on food intake and instrumental alimentary reflex in dogs.
Since Anand and Brobeck (1951) localized the "feeding center" in the lateral hypothalamus, the role of hypothalamic structures in alimentary mechanisms has been studied by many investigators (Teitelbaum and Stellar 1954, Miller 1957, Wyrwicka 1957, Chereshniev 1960, Morgane 1961a, Teitelbaum and Epstein 1962, Balinska 1963, Balinska and Brutkowski 1967, Wyrwicka 1967ab and others). Most of the ...
متن کاملAnand B K & Brobeck J R. Hypothalamic control of food intake in rats and cats. Yale J. Biol. Med. 24:123-40, 1951
Bilateral destructions of a well localised area in lateral hypothalamus led to complete cessation of eating, while lesions involving ventromedial nuclei or the region between these and lateral area produced hyperphagia and obesity. The lateral region (hunger mechanism) was designated 'feeding center' and the medial (inhibitory control) 'satiety center.' [The SCI indicates that this paper has be...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- The Journal of physiology
دوره 127 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1955