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Increasing Humidity Affects Thermoregulation During Low-Intensity Exercise in Women.

Authors :
MOYEN, NICOLE E.
MÜNDEL, TOBY
DU BOIS, ANDREA M.
CICCONE, ANTHONY B.
MORTON, R. HUGH
JUDELSON, DANIEL A.
Source :
Aviation, Space & Environmental Medicine; Sept2014, Vol. 85 Issue 9, p905-911, 7p
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Introduction: Women increasingly occupy manual labor jobs. However, research examining women working under hot-humid conditions is lacking. Therefore, the purpose of our study was to assess how increasing relative humidity (RH) affects women's thermoregulation during low-intensity exercise characteristic of 8 h self-paced manual labor. Methods: There were 10 women (age: 23 ± 2yr; body-surface area: 1.68 ± 0.13 m²; Vo<subscript>2max</subscript>: 46 ± 6 ml·kg<superscript>-1</superscript>·min<superscript>-1</superscript>) who walked 90 min at 35% Vo<subscript>2max</subscript> in 35°C at 55% RH (55RH), 70% RH (70RH), and 85% RH (85RH). Investigators obtained: 1) rectal temperature (T<subscript>re</subscript>), mean-weighted skin temperature (T<subscript>sk</subscript>), and heart rate every 5 min; and 2) respiratory measures every 30 min. Results: Heat production (H) and required rate of evaporative cooling (E<subscript>req</subscript>) remained constant among trials; each RH increment significantly decreased evaporative heat loss (E), but increased heart rate and sweat rate. All other calorimetric and thermometric variables were similar between 55RH and 70RH, but significantly greater in 85RH. T<subscript>re</subscript> only exceeded 38°C in 85RH after walking ~80 min. Combined, dry and respiratory heat losses only compensated for < 30 % of the decreases in E. Conclusion: Women exercising at low intensities in 35°C experienced most statistically significant physiological changes after 70RH. As H and E<subscript>req</subscript> remained constant across trials, heat storage increased with each 15% rise in RH because dry and respiratory heat losses minimally offset decreased E. Higher T<subscript>re</subscript>, T<subscript>sk</subscript>, and resultantly higher sweat rates reflected heat storage increases as E decreased in each trial. Overall, at 35°C T<subscript>a</subscript>, we found women exercising for 90 min at low intensities remained at safe rectal temperatures up to 70% RH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00956562
Volume :
85
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Aviation, Space & Environmental Medicine
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
97941252
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3357/ASEM.3993.2014