Journal article

Physiological and pathophysiological influences on thirst

MJ McKinley, MJ Cairns, DA Denton, G Egan, ML Mathai, A Uschakov, JD Wade, RS Weisinger, BJ Oldfield

Physiology and Behavior | PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2004

Abstract

Thirst motivates animals to seek fluid and drink it. It is regulated by the central nervous system and arises from neural and chemical signals from the periphery interacting in the brain to stimulate a drive to drink. Our research has focussed on the lamina terminalis and the manner in which osmotic and hormonal stimuli from the circulation are detected by neurons in this region and how that information is integrated with other neural signals to generate thirst. Our studies of osmoregulatory drinking in the sheep and rat have produced evidence that osmoreceptors for thirst exist in the dorsal cap of the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (OVLT) and in the periphery of the subfornica..

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University of Melbourne Researchers