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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 236: G105-G112, 1979;
0193-1857/79 $5.00
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AJP: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, Vol 236, Issue 2, G105-G112
Copyright © 1979 by American Physiological Society

ARTICLES

Physiological and behavioral responses to starvation in the golden hamster

KT Borer, N Rowland, A Mirow, Borer RC Jr, and RP Kelch

Physiological and behavioral responses of adult hamsters to starvation were studied by measuring food intake, weight recovery, serum concentrations of glucose, insulin, free fatty acids and beta-hydroxybutyrate, and ketonuria in animals subjected to different weight losses, diets, and durations of fast. Hamsters were debilitated by fasts longer than 12 h or leading to greater than 20% weight loss. Hamsters' feeding patterns were unmodified by fasts ranging between 5 and 12 h and showed no circadian periodicity. Hamsters predominantly recovered from weight losses without increasing their food consumption (unless they were offered a diet of pellets and seeds) and without changing their meal patterns, at a rate of weight gain proportional to the magnitude of preceding weight loss if provided with uninterrupted access to food. By 8 h of fast, blood metabolites were indicative of mobilization of body fat. Hamsters are thus behaviorally unresponsive to duration of fast, but compensate physiologically for weight losses with proportional increases in the rate of weight gain.





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