The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes

We have studied the physiological and behavioural responses in small rodents to ambient alterations. For this purpose, voles and mice were exposed to relatively low (12°C) and high (35°C) ambient temperatures, and heart rate (HR), locomotor activity (LA) and body temperature (BT) were recorded using...

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Published in:Laboratory Animals
Main Authors: Ishii, K., Kuwahara, M., Tsubone, H., Sugano, S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/002367796780744992
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1258/002367796780744992
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spelling crsagepubl:10.1258/002367796780744992 2024-04-28T08:28:24+00:00 The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes Ishii, K. Kuwahara, M. Tsubone, H. Sugano, S. 1996 http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/002367796780744992 http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1258/002367796780744992 en eng SAGE Publications http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license Laboratory Animals volume 30, issue 1, page 7-12 ISSN 0023-6772 1758-1117 General Veterinary Animal Science and Zoology journal-article 1996 crsagepubl https://doi.org/10.1258/002367796780744992 2024-04-09T08:02:51Z We have studied the physiological and behavioural responses in small rodents to ambient alterations. For this purpose, voles and mice were exposed to relatively low (12°C) and high (35°C) ambient temperatures, and heart rate (HR), locomotor activity (LA) and body temperature (BT) were recorded using telemetry system. The control HR (at 24°C) of voles was lower than that of mice. The 'heat exposure' decreased HR to 85.0±3.3% in voles, and to 78.0±3.2% in mice compared with the mean HR of the same time in the control day. The 'cold exposure' increased the HR to 131.9±8.8% in voles, and 119±10.9% in mice. The decreasing rate of HR in heat exposure was smaller in voles than mice, and in cold exposure the increased rate was larger in voles than mice. Cold exposure decreased BT in both species; 96.1±0.5% in voles and 93.7±1.0% in mice. The LA was not changed significantly by heat exposure in either species, but was partially increased by cold exposure. These results demonstrate that telemetry was helpful for qualitative and quantitative behavioural studies in small rodents, and confirmed that the physiological and behavioural responses to ambient temperature changes differed between these animals. Article in Journal/Newspaper Microtus arvalis SAGE Publications Laboratory Animals 30 1 7 12
institution Open Polar
collection SAGE Publications
op_collection_id crsagepubl
language English
topic General Veterinary
Animal Science and Zoology
spellingShingle General Veterinary
Animal Science and Zoology
Ishii, K.
Kuwahara, M.
Tsubone, H.
Sugano, S.
The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes
topic_facet General Veterinary
Animal Science and Zoology
description We have studied the physiological and behavioural responses in small rodents to ambient alterations. For this purpose, voles and mice were exposed to relatively low (12°C) and high (35°C) ambient temperatures, and heart rate (HR), locomotor activity (LA) and body temperature (BT) were recorded using telemetry system. The control HR (at 24°C) of voles was lower than that of mice. The 'heat exposure' decreased HR to 85.0±3.3% in voles, and to 78.0±3.2% in mice compared with the mean HR of the same time in the control day. The 'cold exposure' increased the HR to 131.9±8.8% in voles, and 119±10.9% in mice. The decreasing rate of HR in heat exposure was smaller in voles than mice, and in cold exposure the increased rate was larger in voles than mice. Cold exposure decreased BT in both species; 96.1±0.5% in voles and 93.7±1.0% in mice. The LA was not changed significantly by heat exposure in either species, but was partially increased by cold exposure. These results demonstrate that telemetry was helpful for qualitative and quantitative behavioural studies in small rodents, and confirmed that the physiological and behavioural responses to ambient temperature changes differed between these animals.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ishii, K.
Kuwahara, M.
Tsubone, H.
Sugano, S.
author_facet Ishii, K.
Kuwahara, M.
Tsubone, H.
Sugano, S.
author_sort Ishii, K.
title The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes
title_short The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes
title_full The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes
title_fullStr The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes
title_full_unstemmed The telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( Microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes
title_sort telemetric monitoring of heart rate, locomotor activity, and body temperature in mice and voles ( microtus arvalis ) during ambient temperature changes
publisher SAGE Publications
publishDate 1996
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/002367796780744992
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1258/002367796780744992
genre Microtus arvalis
genre_facet Microtus arvalis
op_source Laboratory Animals
volume 30, issue 1, page 7-12
ISSN 0023-6772 1758-1117
op_rights http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1258/002367796780744992
container_title Laboratory Animals
container_volume 30
container_issue 1
container_start_page 7
op_container_end_page 12
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