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. 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.