Clinical Thermophysiology: New Hypotheses and Emerging Concepts — Special Issue

Medical Hypotheses 50 (3), 1998
Romanovsky AA, Guest Editor

This special issue wais published as the proceedings of the mini-symposium on Clinical Thermophysiology: New Hypotheses and Emerging Concepts (Portland, Oregon, USA, August 25, 1996). The issue includes a preface and six symposium papers. These papers are available at the journal's site (restricted access). For papers from the Romanovsky lab published in this issue, you can view PubMed records and request reprints from the Publications page (http://www.feverlab.net/toll-free.htm).

Preface

Romanovsky AA. Mini-Symposium on Clinical Thermophysiology: New Hypotheses and Emerging Concepts (Preface). Med Hypotheses 50: 183-184, 1998.

Symposium papers

Shibata M. Hyperthermia in brain hemorrhage. Med Hypotheses 50: 185-190, 1998.

Szelenyi Z. Neuroglia: possible role in thermogenesis and body temperature control. Med Hypotheses 50: 191-197, 1998.

Shido O. Can our thermoregulatory system anticipate temperature exposure? Med Hypotheses 50: 199-202, 1998.

Nagasaka T, Brinnel H, Hales JRS, Ogawa T. Selective brain cooling in hyperthermia: the mechanisms and medical implications. Med Hypotheses 50: 203-211, 1998.

Szekely M, Romanovsky AA. Pyretic and antipyretic signals within and without fever: a possible interplay. Med Hypotheses 50: 213-218, 1998.

Romanovsky AA, Szekely M. Fever and hypothermia: two adaptive thermoregulatory responses to systemic inflammation. Med Hypotheses 50: 219-226, 1998.