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Regulation of body mass in rats exposed to chronic acceleration
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1975
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NutritionCaloric RestrictionPhysiological RegulationBody Water ContentObesityMetabolic SyndromeBody CompositionBody MassApplied PhysiologyMetabolic StateHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyEnergy HomeostasisCommercial ChowEndocrinologyPhysiologyFat-free Body MassMetabolismMedicine
Female rats approximately 6 mo old were chronically centrifuged for up to 30 days at 2.76 G or 3.18 G and sacrificed at intervals for body-composition study. Both fat and the fat-free body mass (FFBM) were reduced during the 1st wk of centrifugation, with the fat showing considerably more variation both within and between groups. The FFBM was reduced below control level to the same extent in rats fed commercial chow, a high-fat diet, or a high-protein diet or in rats prefasted to produce a body-mass deficit at the start of centrifugation. There were no centrifugation-associated changes in body water content. It was concluded that body fat showed no evidence of regulation, FFBM is regulated at any constant level of acceleration between 1 and 4.15 G, and the change in FFBM induced by a change in acceleration is probably not regulated.