1. Exertional fatigue, sleep loss, and negative energy balance increase susceptibility to hypothermia
- Author
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Catherine O'Brien, James E. Kain, John W. Castellani, Lloyd G. Meyer, Peter Tikuisis, Ronald L. Shippee, Andrew J. Young, Michael N. Sawka, Laurie A. Blanchard, and Bruce S. Cadarette
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,Physical Exertion ,Cold exposure ,Hypothermia ,Body Temperature ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Military Medicine ,Exertional fatigue ,Fatigue ,Balance (ability) ,Sleep disorder ,business.industry ,Thermoregulation ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Sleep deprivation ,Military Personnel ,Endocrinology ,Body Composition ,Cardiology ,Sleep Deprivation ,Disease Susceptibility ,medicine.symptom ,Energy Metabolism ,Food Deprivation ,business ,Body Temperature Regulation ,Sleep loss - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine how chronic exertional fatigue and sleep deprivation coupled with negative energy balance affect thermoregulation during cold exposure. Eight men wearing only shorts and socks sat quietly during 4-h cold air exposure (10°C) immediately after (re) was lower before and during cold air exposure for A than for SR and LR. Tre declined during cold exposure in A and SR but not LR. Mean weighted skin temperature (T sk) during cold exposure was higher in A and SR than in LR. Metabolic rate increased during all cold exposures, but it was lower during A and LR than SR. The mean body temperature (0.67 Tre + 0.33T sk) threshold for increasing metabolism was lower during A than SR and LR. Thus chronic exertional fatigue and sleep loss, combined with underfeeding, reduced tissue insulation and blunted metabolic heat production, which compromised maintenance of body temperature. A short period of rest, sleep, and refeeding restored the thermogenic response to cold, but thermal balance in the cold remained compromised until after several weeks of recovery when tissue insulation had been restored.
- Published
- 1998
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