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Department of Physiology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78284-7756
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ABSTRACT |
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We tested the hypothesis that the shift in the cutaneous vasodilator response to hyperthermia seen with elevated female reproductive hormones is a prostaglandin-dependent resetting of thermoregulation to higher internal temperatures, similar to that seen in the febrile response to bacterial infection. Using water-perfused suits to control body temperature, we conducted heat stress experiments in resting women under conditions of low and high progesterone and estrogen and repeated these experiments after an acute dose of ibuprofen (800 mg). In six women the hormones were exogenous (oral contraceptives); three women had regular menstrual cycles and were tested in the early follicular and midluteal phases. Resting oral temperature (Tor) was significantly elevated with high hormone status (P < 0.05); this was not affected by ibuprofen treatment (P > 0.2). The Tor threshold for cutaneous vasodilation was significantly increased by high hormone status (+0.27 ± 0.07°C, P < 0.02); the shift was not affected by ibuprofen treatment (with ibuprofen: +0.29 ± 0.08°C, P > 0.2 vs. control experiments). The Tor threshold for sweating was similarly increased by high hormone status (+0.22 ± 0.05°C, P < 0.05); this shift was not influenced by ibuprofen (with ibuprofen: +0.35 ± 0.05, P > 0.1 vs. control experiments). Thus the shift in thermoregulatory control of skin blood flow and sweating mediated by female reproductive steroids is not sensitive to ibuprofen; it therefore appears that this shift is independent of prostaglandins.
skin blood flow; estrogen; progesterone; heat stress; active vasodilation; sweating; human; temperature regulation
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INTRODUCTION |
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IN ADDITION TO SUBSERVING important thermoregulatory reflexes, human cutaneous vascular control is subject to modification by other factors, including, in women, reproductive hormone status. Progesterone and estrogen have been shown to alter the thermoregulatory control of skin blood flow in hyperthermia (3, 7, 8, 22). When progesterone and estrogen are elevated, either in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (7, 8, 22) or exogenously by oral contraceptives (3), a higher internal temperature (threshold) is required to initiate cutaneous vasodilation during hyperthermia (+0.3 to 0.5°C). The effect of this threshold shift on skin blood flow can be striking considering the sensitivity of skin blood flow to increments in internal temperature (10) and the maximum capacity of the skin for blood flow of 6-8 l/min (18).
The reflex control of the human cutaneous circulation involves two branches of the sympathetic nervous system: the adrenergic vasoconstrictor system and the nonadrenergic cutaneous active vasodilator system. This latter system is not tonically active but is responsible for most of the cutaneous vasodilation observed during hyperthermia in humans (10). We recently found that progesterone and estrogen shifted the control of the cutaneous active vasodilator system to higher internal temperatures (3).
Elevated female reproductive hormones also cause increases in resting body temperature and shift the thermoregulatory control of sweating and heart rate to higher internal temperatures during hyperthermia (3, 5, 7, 22). That the control of skin blood flow, sweating, and heart rate (HR) are similarly shifted suggests a central shift in thermoregulatory control (3). This influence on thermoregulatory control is likely to be predominantly due to progesterone, which causes increases in temperature when administered alone (9, 15, 17). Estrogen alone has a depressant effect on body temperature (9) and has been shown to shift the control of cutaneous vasodilation and sweating to lower body temperatures (1).
Another example of a central resetting of thermoregulatory control toward higher internal temperatures occurs in a fever induced by bacterial infection. After infection, pyrogenic cytokines [e.g., interleukin (IL)-1 and IL-6] are elevated in the circulation, and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) increases in the area of the preoptic/anterior hypothalamus (PO/AH) (20, 25). This elevated PGE2 is thought to be responsible for the increase in the temperature around which the PO/AH regulates body temperature (19, 20, 25). Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen are antipyretic via their capacity as cyclooxygenase inhibitors, thereby lowering the level of PGE2 in the PO/AH area (6, 25). It has been suggested that pyrogenic cytokines might also be responsible for the rise in body temperature in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (2, 13). In an earlier study, Rothchild and Barnes (17) examined whether salicylate administration would affect the body temperature rise induced by very high doses (5-50 mg) of progesterone injected intramuscularly in men, but the results of these experiments were considered by the authors to be inconclusive.
We hypothesized that the shift in reflex control of cutaneous vasodilation with elevated progesterone and estrogen is a prostaglandin-dependent shift in the overall control of temperature regulation. To address this hypothesis, we conducted heat stress experiments in resting women in conditions of low and high hormone status, using acute ibuprofen treatment to test whether cyclooxygenase inhibition would reverse or reduce this shift.
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METHODS |
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The protocol for this series of experiments was approved by the
Institutional Review Board of the University of Texas Health Science
Center at San Antonio. Nine young women (ages 21-32 yr) with
normal health status and no history of cardiovascular disease volunteered for the study; each gave written informed consent before
participation. All were nonsmokers, did not consume caffeine within 12 h of the experiments, and did not take any pain medication within 7 days of the experiments. Of the nine subjects, six were taking oral
contraceptives (OC group) and the other three had regular menstrual
cycles (NOC group). The subjects in the OC group were voluntarily
taking combination oral contraceptives of the type that includes
ethinyl estradiol and a low-dose progestin and that provides a steady
level of hormones for 21 days followed by a 7-day placebo or no-pill
period (Table 1) (3). Each subject participated in four experiments. For the OC group the experiments were
carried out as follows: at the end of the 3rd wk of hormone pills (high
hormone status), at the end of the placebo/no pill week (low hormone
status), and one experiment in each phase in which ibuprofen was
administered. The women in the NOC group were studied in the early
follicular (days 2-8) and
midluteal (days 19-24) phases
of the menstrual cycle, with one experiment in each phase in which
ibuprofen was given. For all subjects the order of experiments was
randomized. Each subject monitored her sublingual temperature on waking
each morning during the time period over which the four experiments
were conducted (~8 wk).
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For whole body heating, the subject dressed in a tube-lined suit for
control of body temperature (27). The suit did not cover the head or
the areas of blood flow measurement. Mean skin temperature
(
sk)
was elevated to 38.5°C for ~30-45 min. After whole body
heating,
sk was
returned to normal, and maximum cutaneous vascular conductance (CVC)
was determined by local warming of the area around the flow probe to
42°C for 30 min (12).
Cutaneous blood flow was measured as laser-Doppler blood flow (LDF)
(14) on the ventral forearm. LDF values were divided by mean arterial
pressure to give an index of CVC. Sweating rate was measured by
capacitance hygrometry at the forearm site where LDF was monitored.
sk was
assessed from the weighted average of six thermocouples (upper back,
lower back, abdomen, upper chest, thigh, and calf) (27). Internal
temperature (Tor) was measured with a sublingual thermocouple. To ensure that sublingual temperature was an accurate index of internal temperature, subjects kept their mouths closed and breathed only through the nose throughout all experiments, and no liquids were consumed at any time during any experiment. Mean arterial pressure was continuously measured with a
finger blood pressure cuff (Finapres) placed on the middle finger of
the left hand and referred to heart level, and HR was monitored by electrocardiogram.
All studies were conducted at the same time of day, beginning at 8:00 AM, to avoid the complications of circadian variation in body temperature and temperature regulation (22, 23). For those experiments in which ibuprofen was administered, 800 mg were administered orally 90-105 min before heat stress. This dose is twice the recommended antipyretic dose; it is less than one-half that recommended for daily treatment of arthritis (6). Ibuprofen takes 1.5-2 h to reach maximal plasma concentrations and has a plasma half-life of ~2 h (6). This time course, therefore, allowed for maximal plasma concentrations of ibuprofen during heat stress.
For confirmation of menstrual phase in the NOC group, a 5-ml blood
sample was taken from an antecubital vein before each experiment. Samples were collected in EDTA tubes and immediately centrifuged at
4°C; plasma was then stored at
20°C until the hormone assays were performed. Plasma progesterone and estradiol levels were measured
using commercially available RIA kits (Coat-A-Count, Diagnostic
Products, Los Angeles, CA). Each sample was analyzed in duplicate.
Data analysis. Data from OC and NOC groups were analyzed separately. Tor at rest was compared across phase and ibuprofen treatment by two-way ANOVA with repeated measures. CVC data are expressed as percentage of maximum to allow for intra- and intersubject comparisons (12). CVC was analyzed as a function of Tor. The Tor at which cutaneous vasodilation began was identified as the threshold for cutaneous vasodilation. For the determination of this threshold, plots of CVC as a function of time were used by an investigator blinded to the subjects and experimental conditions. The point after which there was a sustained increase over baseline was selected, and the Tor at that time was identified as the threshold. The thresholds for sweating were identified as the Tor at which active sweating was first detected. Thresholds for vasodilation and sweating were compared across phase and treatment by two-way ANOVA with repeated measures. The amount by which the thresholds shifted was compared between control and ibuprofen conditions by paired t-test.
Regression analyses of the CVC-Tor and sweating rate-Tor relationships beyond the previously identified thresholds were performed for each experiment. The sensitivity of the cutaneous vasodilator or sweating response was identified as the slope of the regression line. For those experiments in which CVC demonstrated a plateau late in heating, the slope was calculated only from the rising phase of the response. The HR-Tor relationship was also analyzed by regression analysis, and the slopes were compared across phase and ibuprofen treatment by two-way ANOVA with repeated measures. From this regression analysis, an HR value corresponding to 37°C Tor was calculated, and this value was compared across phase and ibuprofen treatment by two-way ANOVA. For the NOC group, plasma levels of progesterone and estradiol were compared between phases by paired t-test. Statistical significance was accepted for P < 0.05.| |
RESULTS |
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Resting internal temperature was increased in the high hormone phase in
the OC group and in the luteal phase in the NOC group when measured on
waking and at the start of the experiment ("pre-heat stress";
Table 2). This increase in resting
temperature was not affected by ibuprofen treatment in either group, as
pre-heat stress Tor (measured 90 min after ibuprofen administration but before the onset of heat stress)
was not affected by ibuprofen treatment regardless of hormone status
(P > 0.5; Table 2).
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In the NOC group, menstrual cycle phase was confirmed by measurement of plasma progesterone and estradiol. Plasma progesterone (13.75 ± 1.02 and 0.82 ± 0.08 ng/ml in luteal and follicular phases, respectively, P < 0.01) and estradiol (85.08 ± 18.61 and 31.01 ± 9.59 pg/ml in luteal and follicular phases, respectively, P < 0.01) in the luteal phase were significantly elevated above follicular phase levels.
Whole body heat stress caused an increase in
Tor of ~0.5°C, which was
sufficient to cause marked cutaneous vasodilation and sweating in all
experiments. Figure
1A shows
the cutaneous vasodilator response to heating as a function of
Tor for a representative subject
in the two phases of the oral contraceptive cycle. Figure 1B shows this response for the same
subject in the experiments in which ibuprofen was administered. The
shift in the cutaneous vasodilator response is still apparent in the
high hormone phase. Figure 2 shows sweating
as a function of Tor from control
experiments and those involving ibuprofen. As with CVC, the shift in
the sweating response to higher internal temperatures was unaffected by
ibuprofen.
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For all subjects the Tor
thresholds for cutaneous vasodilation and sweating were increased with
high hormone status regardless of whether ibuprofen was administered.
Figure 3 shows average thresholds for the
OC group, and the values for the NOC group are shown in Table
3. In the OC group the threshold for
cutaneous vasodilation increased 0.27 ± 0.07°C in control
experiments and 0.29 ± 0.08°C in ibuprofen experiments
(P > 0.1 for threshold shifts,
control vs. ibuprofen). Thresholds for sweating increased 0.22 ± 0.05°C in control and 0.35 ± 0.05°C in ibuprofen
experiments (P > 0.1, control vs.
ibuprofen). Threshold shifts in the NOC group were also unaffected by
ibuprofen treatment (P > 0.1).
Overall, the absolute values of the thresholds for cutaneous
vasodilation and sweating were unaffected by ibuprofen treatment
regardless of hormone status (P > 0.5). The sensitivities of the cutaneous vasodilator and sweating
responses with respect to Tor were
not significantly affected by hormone status or ibuprofen treatment (Table 4).
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HR increased linearly with Tor in
all experiments, as has been shown previously (3, 28). The slope of the
HR-Tor relationship was not
altered by hormone status or ibuprofen treatment (37.8 ± 6.8, 31.7 ± 4.9, 43.1 ± 6.3, and 35.7 ± 5.7 beats · min
1 · °C
1
for low hormone, high hormone, low hormone + ibuprofen, and high hormone + ibuprofen, respectively, P > 0.05). As we have shown previously (3), the
HR-Tor relationship was shifted to
higher internal temperatures in the high hormone phase, such that, for a given Tor, HR was always lower
in the high hormone phase. For example, at a
Tor of 37°C, the corresponding
HR value was lower in high hormone phase
(P < 0.05). This shift was not
affected by ibuprofen (P > 0.05);
values were as follows: 88.8 ± 3.3, 80.8 ± 3.5, 83.2 ± 5.4, and 77.8 ± 4.6 beats/min in low hormone, high hormone, low
hormone + ibuprofen, and high hormone + ibuprofen, respectively.
Overall, data from all subjects demonstrated a consistent lack of effect of cyclooxygenase inhibition: there was not one individual example in which ibuprofen caused any diminution of the thermoregulatory control shift in the OC or the NOC group.
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DISCUSSION |
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Cutaneous vasodilator responses to hyperthermia have been shown to be
altered by elevated progesterone and estrogen (3, 7, 8, 22, 23);
however, the mechanisms involved remain incompletely understood. This
alteration is part of a shift in the control of temperature regulation
to higher internal temperatures (3, 7, 8, 22, 23). It has been proposed
that this shift may be similar to a fever that follows bacterial
infection (2, 13). Consistent with this idea is a report that plasma IL-1 is increased in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (2). However, Gonzalez et al. (4) found no increase in the levels of
IL-1
, IL-6, or tumor necrosis factor in the luteal phase, and Rogers
and Baker (16) reported that the levels of IL-1
and IL-6 did not
change with the exogenous progesterone and estrogen in oral
contraceptives. The fever that accompanies a bacterial infection is
dependent on an increase in PGE2
in the PO/AH area (19, 20, 25) and is therefore reduced by
cyclooxygenase inhibition with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
such as ibuprofen (6, 25).
In the present study we found no measurable effect of cyclooxygenase inhibition on the shift in the cutaneous vascular response to hyperthermia, indicating that prostaglandins are not involved. The dose administered in the present study was twice the recommended antipyretic dose for adults (6), yet there was no effect on the absolute values of the thresholds for cutaneous vasodilation or on the amount the threshold shifted between phases. Consistent with these threshold data for CVC, pre-heat stress Tor and the Tor thresholds for sweating were similarly increased with high hormone status compared with low hormone status regardless of whether ibuprofen was administered. Also, ibuprofen did not affect the shift in the HR-Tor relationship to higher internal temperatures with high hormone status.
Although many of the observations regarding the thermoregulatory influences of progesterone and estrogen have been made when both hormones are elevated (3, 5, 7, 8, 22), progesterone is probably the dominant hormone in the thermoregulatory control shifts in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and the high hormone phase of oral contraceptive use. Progesterone is said to be "thermogenic" in that its administration causes increases in body temperature (9, 15, 17). Estrogen alone appears to shift body temperature and temperature regulation to lower levels (1, 9, 24, 26). Although the influence of progesterone appears to dominate, it is also possible that the hormones act in combination in a way that is different from their separate influences.
In 1952, Rothchild and Barnes (17) examined the influence of cyclooxygenase inhibition (oral salicylate administration) on the rectal temperature increase following intramuscular injections of large doses of progesterone (5-25 mg) in men. Their results varied from no effect of salicylate in some individuals to a partial reversal of the internal temperature increase in some of the subjects given larger doses of progesterone (10 and 25 mg). The authors commented that their results were not conclusive, since the effects of salicylate were not uniform among subjects (17).
A possible central mechanism for the influences of female reproductive hormones on thermoregulatory control involves a direct effect on the temperature-sensitive neurons of the PO/AH. Silva and Boulant (21) demonstrated in rat brain slice preparations that estradiol changes the firing rate of temperature-sensitive neurons in the PO/AH; progesterone can also influence the firing rate of these neurons (11). To the extent that these neurons are ultimately in control of thermoregulation, such direct influences of progesterone and estrogen during the menstrual cycle may contribute to the alterations in thermoregulatory control by these hormones. The cellular mechanism(s) by which the hormones alter firing rate in these neurons remains to be determined; the present results, however, do not support a role for prostaglandins.
In agreement with previous observations from our laboratory and others (3, 8, 22), the present data show no influence of hormone status on the sensitivities of the cutaneous vasodilator or sweating responses as functions of internal temperature during hyperthermia (Table 3). Hessemer and Brück (7) reported an increase in the sensitivity of cutaneous vasodilation in the luteal phase; the reason for the discrepancy between their results and the above studies is unclear.
In summary, the alterations in cutaneous vascular control during hyperthermia as well as the changes in body temperature and in the control of sweating that accompany increases in plasma progesterone and estrogen are not sensitive to cyclooxygenase inhibition by ibuprofen. These alterations therefore appear to be prostaglandin independent. Therefore, although the changes in thermoregulatory control accompanying elevated progesterone and estrogen follow a pattern similar to that observed with the fever following an infection, the mechanisms must be different. Although direct influences of progesterone and estrogen on temperature-sensitive neurons of the PO/AH may be involved, further study is needed to clarify the mechanisms by which these hormones shift thermoregulatory control.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We are grateful to Dr. Lou A. Stephenson for helpful discussions during the development of these studies. We thank Wojciech Kosiba for expert technical assistance and Francis Nieves-Roldan for performing the RIAs.
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FOOTNOTES |
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These studies were supported by National Institutes of Health Grants HL-59166 and T32-AG-00205.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. M. Johnson, Dept. of Physiology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Dr., San Antonio, TX 78284-7756 (E-mail: johnson{at}uthscsa.edu).
Received 13 October 1998; accepted in final form 19 January 1999.
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K. Aoki, D. P. Stephens, and J. M. Johnson Diurnal variation in cutaneous vasodilator and vasoconstrictor systems during heat stress Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, August 1, 2001; 281(2): R591 - R595. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. Charkoudian, B. Fromy, and J.-L. Saumet Reflex control of the cutaneous circulation after acute and chronic local capsaicin J Appl Physiol, May 1, 2001; 90(5): 1860 - 1864. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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E. M. Brooks-Asplund, J. G. Cannon, and W. L. Kenney Influence of hormone replacement therapy and aspirin on temperature regulation in postmenopausal women Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, September 1, 2000; 279(3): R839 - R848. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. S. Stachenfeld, C. Silva, and D. L. Keefe Estrogen modifies the temperature effects of progesterone J Appl Physiol, May 1, 2000; 88(5): 1643 - 1649. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. Charkoudian, D. P. Stephens, K. C. Pirkle, W. A. Kosiba, and J. M. Johnson Influence of female reproductive hormones on local thermal control of skin blood flow J Appl Physiol, November 1, 1999; 87(5): 1719 - 1723. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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F. C. Baker, H. S. Driver, J. Paiker, G. G. Rogers, and D. Mitchell Acetaminophen does not affect 24-h body temperature or sleep in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle J Appl Physiol, April 1, 2002; 92(4): 1684 - 1691. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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