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Featured researches published by Giovanni Caola.


Biological Rhythm Research | 2002

The Circadian Rhythm of Body Temperature of the Horse

Giuseppe Piccione; Giovanni Caola; Roberto Refinetti

Rectal temperature of 10 female adult horses was recorded every 2 h for 10 consecutive days under a natural winter photoperiod (9 h of light and 15 h of darkness per day). A robust daily rhythm of body temperature was observed in all animals. The rhythm had a mean level of 38.3°C and a range of excursion of 1.0°C. Temperature started its daily ascent at dawn each day and reached a maximum 14 hours later. Body temperature of 5 of the horses was studied for 10 more days under constant illumination. The rhythm persisted under this condition, although with a slightly longer period of 24.2 h, which confirms the endogenous nature of the rhythm. Despite the fact that the body size of the horse is several orders of magnitude greater than that of rodents, the various parameters of the body temperature rhythm of the horse are similar to those of several species of rodents previously studied.


BMC Physiology | 2003

Daily and estrous rhythmicity of body temperature in domestic cattle

Giuseppe Piccione; Giovanni Caola; Roberto Refinetti

BackgroundRhythmicity in core body temperature has been extensively studied in humans and laboratory animals but much less in farm animals. Extending the study of rhythmicity of body temperature to farm animals is important not only from a comparative perspective but also from an economic perspective, as greater knowledge of this process can lead to improvements in livestock production practices. In this study in cattle, we investigated the maturation of the daily rhythm of body temperature in newborn calves, characterized the parameters of the daily rhythm in young cows, and studied the oscillation in body temperature associated with the estrous cycle in adult cows.ResultsWe found that the daily rhythm of body temperature is absent at birth but matures fully during the first two months of life. The mature rhythm had a mean level of 38.3°C, a range of excursion of 1.4°C, and was more robust than that of any mammalian species previously studied (90% of maximal robustness). Sexually mature cows also exhibited a robust estrous rhythm of body temperature. An elevation of about 1.3°C was observed every 21 days on the day of estrus. Small seasonal variations in this pattern were observed.ConclusionIn conclusion, calves exhibit a very robust daily rhythm of body temperature, although this rhythm is absent at birth and develops during the first two months of life. Adult cows exhibit also 21-day rhythmicity in body temperature reflecting the duration of the estrous cycle.


Marine Environmental Research | 2010

Impact of an acoustic stimulus on the motility and blood parameters of European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.) and gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata L.)

Giuseppa Buscaino; Francesco Filiciotto; Gaspare Buffa; Antonio Bellante; Vincenzo Di Stefano; Anna Assenza; Francesco Fazio; Giovanni Caola; Salvatore Mazzola

The physiological responses of fish to underwater noise are poorly understood and further information is needed to evaluate any possible negative effects of sound exposure. We exposed European sea bass and gilthead sea bream to a 0.1-1 kHz linear sweep (150 dB(rms) re 1 microPa). This band frequency is perceptible by many species of fish and is mainly produced by vessel traffic. We assessed the noise-induced motility reaction (analysing the movements) and the haematological responses (measuring blood glucose and lactate, and haematocrit levels). The noise exposure produced a significant increase in motility as well as an increase in lactate and haematocrit levels in sea bream and sea bass. A significant decrease of glucose was only observed in sea bream. A linear correlation between blood parameters and motility in fish exposed to the noise was observed. The acoustic stimulus produced intense muscle activity.


Chronobiology International | 2004

Influence of Fasting and Exercise on the Daily Rhythm of Serum Leptin in the Horse

Giuseppe Piccione; Cristiano Bertolucci; Augusto Foà; Giovanni Caola

The hormone leptin is secreted by white adipocytes and regulates food intake and energy expenditure in rodents and humans. The goal of the present study was to investigate the existence of a daily rhythm of serum leptin in horses and its dependence on fasting and physical exercise. A robust daily rhythm of leptin was found in both athletic and sedentary horses, with a daytime trough and a peak in the dark phase. While physical exercise never induced changes in circulating leptin, fasting reliably affected serum leptin levels. Food deprivation did not abolish the daily rhythm of serum leptin, but daily mean leptin levels in fasted horses were significantly lower than in regularly fed horses. This result indicates that leptin production is not a mere consequence of feeding behavior. The fact that in a large animal such as the horse a short fast decreases leptin without significantly changing the body weight demonstrates that changes in levels of circulating leptin associated with food restriction do not solely reflect changes in amount of body fat.


Chronobiology International | 2002

Circadian modulation of starvation-induced hypothermia in sheep and goats.

Giuseppe Piccione; Giovanni Caola; Roberto Refinetti

Prolonged food deprivation is known to cause a fall in the core body temperature of homeotherms. In various species of small birds and mammals (body mass up to 2–3 kg), it has been shown that starvation-induced hypothermia is modulated by the circadian system, in the sense that hypothermia is observed primarily during the inactive phase of the daily activity cycle (i.e., during the night for diurnal animals and during the day for nocturnal animals), whereas relatively normal temperatures are recorded during the active phase. To investigate whether this modulation occurs also in larger animals, we investigated the effects of 4d food deprivation on the body temperature rhythm of goats and sheep (body mass 30–40 kg). In goats, the body temperature rhythm was found to have a mean level of 39.0°C with a mean daily range of excursion of 0.42°C. The daily oscillation in body temperature persisted during the first day of fasting, but the rhythm was drastically damped, if not eliminated, over the next 3 d as body temperature descended from the baseline level of 39.0 to 38.2°C. In sheep, the rhythm was found to have a mean level of 39.3°C with a mean daily range of excursion of 0.34°C. The daily oscillation in body temperature persisted through the 4 d of food deprivation, even though the mean level of body temperature gradually fell. Temperature fell more during the third and fourth nights than during the third and fourth days. Thus, circadian modulation of starvation-induced hypothermia was observed in sheep but not in goats.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2003

Circadian rhythms of body temperature and liver function in fed and food-deprived goats

Giuseppe Piccione; Giovanni Caola; Roberto Refinetti

Daily rhythms of body core temperature and liver function were recorded in goats maintained under various schedules of lighting and feeding. Concentration of urea in the blood was used as an index of digestion-driven hepatic activity, whereas concentration of cholesterol served as an index of autonomous hepatic activity. Body temperature exhibited robust circadian rhythmicity in the presence and absence of a light-dark cycle and/or a feeding regime. The rhythm was more responsive to shifts in feeding time than to shifts in the light-dark cycle. Urea concentration in the blood exhibited daily rhythmicity only in the presence of a daily feeding regime and, therefore, was driven by ingestive and digestive processes. The rhythm of cholesterol concentration persisted in the presence or absence of a light-dark cycle and/or a feeding regime, except when the feeding time was shifted under constant light. However, the cholesterol rhythm did not respond either to shifts in the light-dark cycle or, more importantly, to shifts in feeding time. Thus, based on this index of hepatic function, the liver cannot be identified as the site of the putative food-entrainable pacemaker.


Journal of Thermal Biology | 2002

Maturation of the daily body temperature rhythm in sheep and horse

Giuseppe Piccione; Giovanni Caola; Roberto Refinetti

The ontogeny of circadian rhythmicity in farm animals has received very little attention in the chronobiological literature. In this study, the maturation of the daily rhythm of body temperature during the first month of life was investigated in lambs and foals. In both lambs and foals, the adult daily pattern of body temperature oscillation (i.e., consistently higher temperatures at dusk than at dawn) was detectable within the first 10 days of life and was fully attained a month after birth. In the lambs, more clearly so than in the foals, the difference in temperature between dawn and dusk was achieved almost exclusively by a gradual elevation of temperature at dusk, while the temperature at dawn remained unaltered. In adult sheep, rectal temperature had a daily range of 1.0°C with a mean of 39.1°C. In adult horses, the range was 0.5°C and the mean was 38.1°C.


Biological Rhythm Research | 2008

Daily rhythms of activity in horses housed in different stabling conditions

Giuseppe Piccione; Anna Costa; Claudia Giannetto; Giovanni Caola

Abstract Total locomotor activity was studied in 10 Thoroughbreds housed under a natural 12/12 light/dark cycle. Five horses were housed in individual boxes, and five were housed in individual boxes with a paddock. In order to record locomotor activity, on each horse was placed an Actiwatch-Mini® (Cambridge Neurotechnology Ltd, UK), actigraphy-based data loggers that record a digitally integrated measure of motor activity. Locomotor activity in the different experimental conditions was evaluated by visual inspection. Average amount of activity (bout of activity/hour) during light and dark phase and cosine Peak (time of peak activity) were calculate using Actiwatch Activity Analysis 5.06. Students t-test was used to determine significant differences. The results from this study underline the influence of stabling conditions on activity rhythms in horses; furthermore, we clearly established that in horses, the activity rhythm reaches its peak in the middle of the day.


Arquivo Brasileiro De Medicina Veterinaria E Zootecnia | 2010

Monitoring of physiological and blood parameters during perinatal and neonatal period in calves

Giuseppe Piccione; S. Casella; P. Pennisi; C. Giannetto; Anna Costa; Giovanni Caola

Rectal temperature, heart and respiratory rates, and the course of some blood parameters were monitored in calves during perinatal and neonatal periods. The study was carried out on eight Limousine calves. From all subjects, rectal temperature, heart rate, and respiratory rate were measured. Blood samples were taken at the same hour (9am) from the external jugular vein, and then centrifuged and stored until analyses. By means of an UV spectrophotometer, the following blood parameters were assessed for each subject: total protein, total cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), urea, creatinine, cholinesterase, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), hydroxybutirate, glutamate pyruvate transaminases (GPT), glutamate oxalacetate transaminases (GOT), direct and total bilirubin, magnesium, iron, potassium, phosphorus, chloride and sodium. The results showed a significant effect of days of life (P<0.05) only on total cholesterol, creatinine and GOT during the first week of life and a significant effect of days of life on rectal temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, total cholesterol, NEFA, creatinina, and GOT during the first month of life. A correlation among individual values for postnatal age (days of life) and heart rate in calves during the first month of life was observed. In conclusion, modifications of studied parameters could be attributed to functional development of calves in neonatal period and contribute to the knowledge of adaptation processes in calf during the first week and the first month of life resulting useful for the diagnosis and treatment of any neonatal diseases.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2004

Day/night pattern of arterial blood gases in the cow

Giuseppe Piccione; Giovanni Caola; Jacopo P. Mortola

Both metabolic rate and pulmonary ventilation change throughout 24h with a circadian pattern. Because their changes occur almost in synchrony and by a similar amount, blood gases may remain steady within a narrow range. We tested this possibility in five cows (Bos taurus, Bruna Italiana breed), maintained in a stable at 29 degrees C, under natural light-dark (LD) regime, by measuring arterial blood gases every 3h for 2 days. All cows presented a clear day/night pattern of body temperature (T(b)), with an average peak-trough difference (PTD) of 0.5 degrees C. Breathing rate oscillated significantly in three out of five animals, with a group-mean PTD of 2 breaths per minute, and it was time-advanced with respect to the oscillation of T(b). Significant oscillations in arterial pH, bicarbonate, partial pressure of oxygen and partial pressure of carbon dioxide (Pa(CO2) ) were observed in, respectively, 1 cow out of 5, 1/5, 3/5 and 5/5. Of all these variables, group-mean analysis revealed a significant day/night pattern only for Pa(CO2), and even in this case the average PTD was less than 1 mmHg. We conclude that, in the cow, blood gases remain remarkably stable throughout the 24 h. Hence, the daily oscillations of body temperature, breathing rate, and probably of many other factors affecting metabolic rate and pulmonary ventilation do not preclude an excellent homeostasis of blood gases.

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