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Hemostatic responses to exercise, dehydration, and simulated bleeding in heat-stressed humans
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- American Physiological Society, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Heat stress followed by an accompanying hemorrhagic challenge may influence hemostasis. We tested the hypothesis that hemostatic responses would be increased by passive heat stress, as well as exercise-induced heat stress, each with accompanying central hypovolemia to simulate a hemorrhagic insult. In aim 1, subjects were exposed to passive heating or normothermic time control, each followed by progressive lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) to presyncope. In aim 2 subjects exercised in hyperthermic environmental conditions, with and without accompanying dehydration, each also followed by progressive LBNP to presyncope. At baseline, pre-LBNP, and post-LBNP (30)] to 5.1% post-LBNP compared with 1.5% (time control) and 2.7% in N-LBNP ( P = 0.05 for main effect). Hyperthermia also potentiated increased platelet counts post-LBNP as follows: 274 K/µl for H-LBNP, 246 K/µl for N-LBNP, and 196 K/µl for time control ( P < 0.05 for the interaction). For aim 2, hydration status associated with exercise in the heat did not affect the hemostatic activity, but fibrinolysis (LY30) was increased to 6–10% when subjects were dehydrated compared with an increase to 2–4% when hydrated ( P = 0.05 for treatment). Central hypovolemia via LBNP is a primary driver of hemostasis compared with hyperthermia and dehydration effects. However, hyperthermia does induce significant thrombocytosis and by itself causes an increase in clot lysis. Dehydration associated with exercise-induced heat stress increases clot lysis but does not affect exercise-activated or subsequent hypovolemia-activated hemostasis in hyperthermic humans. Clinical implications of these findings are that quickly restoring a hemorrhaging hypovolemic trauma patient with cold noncoagulant fluids (crystalloids) can have serious deleterious effects on the body’s innate ability to form essential clots, and several factors can increase clot lysis, which should therefore be closely monitored.
- Subjects :
- Hyperthermia
Adult
Male
Hot Temperature
Physiology
medicine.medical_treatment
Hypovolemia
Hemorrhage
030204 cardiovascular system & hematology
Heat Stress Disorders
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Physiology (medical)
Fibrinolysis
Medicine
Humans
Platelet
Arterial Pressure
Dehydration
Exercise
Lower Body Negative Pressure
Hemostasis
business.industry
030208 emergency & critical care medicine
Hyperthermia, Induced
medicine.disease
Heat stress
Coagulation
Anesthesia
medicine.symptom
business
Heat-Shock Response
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1fea8f3d2b6831ae57d51a3efa9bd967