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Does intramuscular thermal feedback modulate eccrine sweating in exercising humans?

Authors :
Christopher J. Gordon
Nigel A.S. Taylor
Gabrielle Todd
Herbert Groeller
Todd, G
Gordon, CJ
Groeller, H
Taylor, N
Source :
Acta Physiologica. 212:86-96
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Wiley, 2014.

Abstract

Aim: Few investigators have considered the possibility that skeletal muscles might contain thermosensitive elements capable of modifying thermoeffector responses. In this experiment, the temporal relationships between dynamic changes in deep-body and intramuscular temperatures and eccrine sweat secretion were explored during rhythmical and reproducible variations in heat production. Methods: Eight subjects performed semi-recumbent cycling (25 °C) at a constant load to first establish whole-body thermal and sudomotor steady states (35 min), followed by a 24-min block of sinusoidal workload variations (three, 8-min periods) and then returning to steady-state cycling (20 min). Individual oesophageal, mean skin and intramuscular (vastus lateralis) temperatures were independently cross-correlated with simultaneously measured forehead sweat rates to evaluate the possible thermal modulation of sudomotor activity. Results: Both intramuscular and oesophageal temperatures showed strong correlations with sinusoidal variations in sweating with respective maximal cross-correlation coefficients of 0.807 ( 0.044) and 0.845 ( 0.035), but these were not different (P = 0.40). However, the phase delay between intramuscular temperature changes and sweat secretion was significantly shorter than the delay between oesophageal temperature and sweating [25.6 s ( 12.6) vs. 46.9 s ( 11.3); P = 0.03]. Conclusion: The temporal coupling of eccrine sweating to intramuscular temperature, combined with a shorter phase delay, was consistent with the presence of thermosensitive elements within skeletal muscles that appear to participate in the modulation of thermal sweating. Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

ISSN :
17481708
Volume :
212
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Physiologica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....03f1136f52530c92f0886767faca43dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/apha.12327