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The effectiveness of hand cooling at reducing exercise-induced hyperthermia and improving distance-race performance in wheelchair and able-bodied athletes

Authors :
Keith Tolfrey
Greg Atkinson
Michelle Swainson
Victoria L. Goosey-Tolfrey
Craig Boyd
Source :
Journal of Applied Physiology. 105:37-43
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2008.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of reducing core temperature in postexercise hyperthermic subjects and to assess if hand cooling (HC) improves subsequent timed distance performance. Following a detailed measurement check on the use of insulated auditory canal temperature (Tac), eight wheelchair (WA) athletes and seven male able-bodied (AB) athletes performed two testing sessions, comprising a 60-min exercise protocol and 10-min recovery period, followed by a performance trial (1 km and 3 km for WA and AB, respectively) at 30.8°C (SD 0.2) and 60.6% (SD 0.2) relative humidity. In a counterbalanced order, HC and a no-cooling condition was administered during the 10-min recovery period before the performance trial. Nonsignificant condition × time interactions for both WA ( F15,75= 1.5, P = 0.14) and AB ( F15,90= 1.2, P = 0.32) confirmed that the exercise-induced changes (Δ) in Tacwere similar before each intervention. However, the exercise-induced increase was evidently greater in AB compared with WA (2.0 vs. 1.3°C change, respectively). HC produced ΔTacof −0.4°C (SD 0.4) and −1.2°C (SD 0.2) in comparison (WA and AB, respectively), and simple-effects analyses suggested that the reductions in Tacwere noteworthy after 4 min of HC. HC had an impact on improving AB performances by −4.0 s (SD 11.5) ( P < 0.05) and WA by −20.5 s (SD 24.2) ( P > 0.05). In conclusion, extraction of heat through the hands was effective in lowering Tacin both groups and improving 3-km performance in the AB athletes and trends toward positive gains for the 1-km performance times of the WA group.

Details

ISSN :
15221601 and 87507587
Volume :
105
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Applied Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cf6005573d932cb03d566f07a5f0ce4a