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Related Experiment Videos

Termination of drinking: satiation

E F Adolph

    Federation Proceedings
    |July 1, 1982
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Drinking behaviors vary by species, with both alimentary and central factors influencing when animals stop drinking. Similar satiation patterns exist for various intakes, suggesting a common regulatory mechanism for clearing deficits.

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    Purposes and methods of the study.

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    Area of Science:

    • Physiology
    • Animal Behavior
    • Homeostasis

    Background:

    • Drinking behaviors exhibit species-specific variations, such as differences in water swallowing speeds between dogs and rats.
    • Alimentary cues play a significant role in terminating drinking episodes.
    • Parenteral water administration bypasses alimentary factors but can still result in delayed satiation.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To investigate the factors influencing the termination of drinking behavior.
    • To explore the role of central mechanisms, particularly in the neurohypophysis, in regulating satiation.
    • To compare the kinetics of water intake with other physiological intakes like food, sodium, oxygen, and heat.

    Main Methods:

    • Comparative analysis of drinking speeds across different species (e.g., dog, rat).

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  • Examination of satiation patterns following oral versus parenteral water intake.
  • Kinetics analysis of various physiological intakes to identify common regulatory principles.
  • Main Results:

    • Drinking termination is primarily driven by alimentary factors.
    • Central factors, including neurohypophyseal influences, are recognized regulators of satiation.
    • Kinetics of diverse intakes (food, sodium, oxygen, heat) demonstrate analogous satiation or saturation patterns.

    Conclusions:

    • Drinking termination involves a complex interplay of alimentary and central regulatory mechanisms.
    • The concept of 'clearance of deficits' provides a unifying dimension for understanding various physiological intake satiation patterns.
    • Homeostatic regulation of deficits appears to be a conserved principle across different intake types.