Relationship of Emotional Behaviors Induced by Electrical Stimulation of the Hypothalamus to Changes in EKG, Heart, Stomach, Adrenal Glands, and Thymus
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Psychosomatic Medicine
- Vol. 58 (4) , 383-391
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006842-199607000-00011
Abstract
The relationships of hypothalamically elicited emotional behaviors to their accompanying pathophysiological effects were examined as a model of how complex "emotional behaviors" may be related to fundamental psychosomatic disorders.Twenty-two unanesthetized adult cats were studied. EKG alterations and histological changes in the heart, stomach, adrenal glands, and thymus were related to the specific stereotypical emotional behaviors that could be elicited by hypothalamic stimulation in tamed subjects. Restlessness, threat, and searching-biting behaviors were evoked by electrical stimulation of the anteromedial, ventromedial, and lateral hypothalamus, respectively. The occurrence of cardiac arrhythmias, ST and/or T (ST-T) changes in the EKG, histological damage to myocardium, gastric erosion, and adrenal hyperplasia were generally observed in the restlessness and threat groups but not in the searching-biting group. The pathophysiological effects were similar in the restlessness and threat groups with no specific EKG change or organ effect attributable to either site of stimulation. Hypothalamically elicited restlessness or threat behaviors in cats are each associated with cardiac, gastric, and adrenal pathophysiologies.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- The relation of emotional behavior to plasma catecholamines, cortisol and ventricular arrhythmiaJournal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1995
- Relation of emotional behaviors to urine catecholamines and cortisolPhysiology & Behavior, 1995
- Cardiac arrhythmias induced in cats by stimulation of the anteromedial hypothalamusInternational Journal of Psychophysiology, 1988
- Cryoblockade of the ventromedial frontal cortex reverses hypertension in the rat.Hypertension, 1987
- Emotional behavior and arrhythmias induced in cats by hypothalamic stimulationLife Sciences, 1985
- Coronary artery spasm in the rat induced by hypothalamic stimulationAtherosclerosis, 1984
- Organization of cardiovascular functions under experimental emotional stressJournal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1981
- Myocardial alterations following hypothalamic stimulation in the intact conscious dogAmerican Heart Journal, 1974
- Hypothalamic Stimulation and Feline Gastric Mucosal Cellular PopulationsPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1966
- Cardiac ischemic changes and arrhythmias induced by hypothalamic stimulationThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1963