1. Heat acclimatization blunts copeptin responses to hypertonicity from dehydrating exercise in humans.
- Author
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Stacey MJ, Woods DR, Brett SJ, Britland SE, Fallowfield JL, Allsopp AJ, and Delves SK
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers blood, Biomarkers urine, Dehydration urine, Humans, Male, Muscle Hypertonia urine, Telemetry methods, Young Adult, Acclimatization physiology, Dehydration blood, Dehydration physiopathology, Exercise physiology, Glycopeptides blood, Hot Temperature adverse effects, Muscle Hypertonia blood, Muscle Hypertonia physiopathology, Sweating physiology
- Abstract
Acclimatization favors greater extracellular tonicity from lower sweat sodium, yet hyperosmolality may impair thermoregulation during heat stress. Enhanced secretion or action of vasopressin could mitigate this through increased free water retention. Aims were to determine responses of the vasopressin surrogate copeptin to dehydrating exercise and investigate its relationships with tonicity during short and long-term acclimatization. Twenty-three participants completed a structured exercise programme following arrival from a temperate to a hot climate. A Heat Tolerance Test (HTT) was conducted on Day-2, 6, 9 and 23, consisting of 60-min block-stepping at 50% VO
2 peak, with no fluid intake. Resting sweat [Na+ ] was measured by iontophoresis. Changes in body mass (sweat loss), core temperature, heart rate, osmolality (serum and urine) and copeptin and aldosterone (plasma) were measured with each Test. From Day 2 to Day 23, sweat [Na+ ] decreased significantly (adjusted P < 0.05) and core temperature and heart rate fell. Over the same interval, HTT-associated excursions were increased for serum osmolality (5 [-1, 9] vs. 9 [5, 12] mosm·kg-1 ), did not differ for copeptin (9.6 [6.0, 15.0] vs. 7.9 [4.3, 14.7] pmol·L-1 ) and were reduced for aldosterone (602 [415, 946] vs. 347 [263, 537] pmol·L-1 ). Urine osmolality was unchanging and related consistently to copeptin at end-exercise, whereas the association between copeptin and serum osmolality was right-shifted (P = 0.0109) with acclimatization. Unchanging urine:serum osmolality argued against increased renal action of vasopressin. In conclusion, where exercise in the heat is performed without fluid replacement, heat acclimatization does not appear to enhance AVP-mediated free water retention in humans., (© 2018 Crown copyright. Physiological Reports © 2018 published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society. This article is published with the permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Queen's Printer for Scotland.)- Published
- 2018
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