2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.09.20.508692
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Hyperthermia elevates brain temperature and improves behavioural signs in animal models of Autism spectrum disorder

Abstract: Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) are predominantly developmental in nature and largely genetically determined. There are some human data supporting the idea that fever can improve symptoms in some individuals but the human data for this are limited and there are almost no data to support this from animal models. In the current study, we used a whole body hyperthermia (WBH) protocol and systemic inflammation induced by bacterial endotoxin (LPS) to dissociate temperature and inflammatory elements of fever in orde… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(3 citation statements)
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“…While our research group and others have reported that repeated oxytocin treatment can lead to increased sociability in mouse models [16,38,39,129], not all investigators have observed prosocial effects with chronic oxytocin regimens [130]. Results from clinical studies examining chronic oxytocin effects in ASD have been similarly mixed [131][132][133].…”
Section: An Asd-like Myelin-deficient Inflammatory Transcriptomic Pro...mentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…While our research group and others have reported that repeated oxytocin treatment can lead to increased sociability in mouse models [16,38,39,129], not all investigators have observed prosocial effects with chronic oxytocin regimens [130]. Results from clinical studies examining chronic oxytocin effects in ASD have been similarly mixed [131][132][133].…”
Section: An Asd-like Myelin-deficient Inflammatory Transcriptomic Pro...mentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Mouse models play an important role in understanding the causes of ASD [35]. C58/J is an inbred mouse strain that exhibits low sociability primarily in males and deficits in social transmission of food preference [36][37][38]. In the 3-chamber social choice test used to assess sociability, our research group has found that C58/J mice exhibit divergent phenotypes with approximately 50% of mice exhibiting positive sociability and 50% exhibiting social avoidance [37].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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