Back to Search Start Over

Heat Acclimation Improves Heat Tolerance Test Specificity in a Criteria-dependent Manner

Authors :
Samuel N. Cheuvront
Karleigh E. Bradbury
Roy M. Salgado
Robert W. Kenefick
Katherine M. Mitchell
Nisha Charkoudian
Source :
Medicine and science in sports and exercise. 53(5)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Purpose This study aimed to characterize HTT specificity and to determine any effect of HA on the outcome. Methods Thirteen unacclimatized, healthy men (V˙O2peak, 43.0 ± 4.8 mL·kg-1⋅min-1) with no previous history of heat illness completed 8 d of HA using the HTT protocol (40°C/40% RH; 120 min; 5 km·h-1 and 2% grade). Heart rate (HR) and core temperature (Tcore) recorded every 5 min during exercise and at the end of 120 min (terminal value) were compared between days 1 and 8. Test specificity (given no previous history of heat illness, the probability of being heat tolerant) was calculated on days 1 and 8. Results There was a significant reduction in HR and Tcore between days 1 and 8, indicating successful HA. All volunteers successfully completed 120 min of walking on all days. HTT specificity ranged between 54% and 85% on day 1 and between 77% and 92% on day 8, depending on the HTT criteria used. Conclusion Young healthy men without any previous heat illness experienced a 15% to 46% false-positive fail rate for the HTT without HA. After HA, the false-positive fail rate decreased to between 8% and 13%. Outcomes of the HTT are significantly affected by the criteria used and by HA status. The use of HTT for RTA decisions should be done with the recognition of these effects.

Details

ISSN :
15300315
Volume :
53
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medicine and science in sports and exercise
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....32e861db1d3c4ca0ababe5b8ae83093a