Artículos de revistas
Water deprivation and the double- depletion hypothesis: common neural mechanisms underlie thirst and salt appetite
Fecha
2007-05-01Registro en:
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research. Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica, v. 40, n. 5, p. 707-712, 2007.
0100-879X
10.1590/S0100-879X2006005000101
S0100-879X2007000500015
S0100-879X2007000500015.pdf
7641979287850489
0201361251312074
0000-0001-5433-4493
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
Water deprivation-induced thirst is explained by the double-depletion hypothesis, which predicts that dehydration of the two major body fluid compartments, the extracellular and intracellular compartments, activates signals that combine centrally to induce water intake. However, sodium appetite is also elicited by water deprivation. In this brief review, we stress the importance of the water-depletion and partial extracellular fluid-repletion protocol which permits the distinction between sodium appetite and thirst. Consistent enhancement or a de novo production of sodium intake induced by deactivation of inhibitory nuclei (e.g., lateral parabrachial nucleus) or hormones (oxytocin, atrial natriuretic peptide), in water-deprived, extracellular-dehydrated or, contrary to tradition, intracellular-dehydrated rats, suggests that sodium appetite and thirst share more mechanisms than previously thought. Water deprivation has physiological and health effects in humans that might be related to the salt craving shown by our species.