Short-Term Warm-Water Immersion for Improving Whole-Body Heat Loss in Older Men.

Kristina-Marie T Janetos,Fergus K O'Connor,Robert D Meade,Brodie J Richards,Nick J Koetje,Nathalie V Kirby,James J McCormick,Andreas D Flouris,Glen P Kenny
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Abstract

PURPOSE Exercise-induced heat acclimation can mitigate age-related reductions in heat-loss capacity, though performing repeated bouts of strenuous exercise in the heat may be untenable for many older adults. While short-term passive heat acclimation (e.g., ≤7 days of warm-water immersion) enhances whole-body heat loss in young adults, evidence of its efficacy in older adults is lacking. Thus, we examined whether 7-days warm-water immersion would improve whole-body heat loss in older adults. METHODS Twelve habitually active older men (median [IQR] age: 68 [64-73] years; peak oxygen uptake (V̇O2peak): 34.1 [29.4-36.1] mLO2·kg-1·min-1) completed 7 consecutive days of ~90-minutes warm-water immersion (~40 °C) with core (rectal) temperature clamped at ~38.5 °C for the final 60 minutes. Before and after the warm-water immersion intervention, whole-body total (evaporative + dry) heat loss was measured via direct calorimetry during three, 30-minute bouts of cycling at increasing fixed rates of metabolic heat production (150, 200, 250 W·m-2), each separated by 15-minutes rest, in a hot-dry environment (40 °C, ~13% relative humidity). Rectal temperature and heart rate were measured continuously. RESULTS Following 7 days of warm-water immersion, whole-body total heat loss was elevated by 23 [95% confidence interval: 14, 31] W·m-2 across exercise bouts (acclimation-effect: P < 0.001; interaction: P = 0.598). This was paralleled by reductions in core temperature and heart rate of 0.3 [0.2, 0.4] °C and 11 [8, 14] beats·min-1 (both, acclimation-effect: P < 0.001; interaction: P = 0.288), respectively. CONCLUSIONS Seven consecutive days of warm-water immersion improved whole-body heat loss and reduced core temperature and cardiovascular strain across light-to-vigorous intensity exercise in habitually active older men. Passive heat acclimation may be an efficacious alternative to exercise-heat acclimation to improve heat-loss capacity. Studies are warranted to assess effectiveness in more heat-vulnerable populations.
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短期温水浸泡改善老年男性全身热损失。
目的:运动引起的热适应可以减轻与年龄相关的热损失能力下降,尽管对许多老年人来说,在高温下反复进行剧烈运动可能是不可行的。虽然短期被动热适应(例如,温水浸泡≤7天)可以增强年轻人的全身热损失,但缺乏证据表明其对老年人有效。因此,我们研究了7天温水浸泡是否会改善老年人的全身热损失。方法12例有运动习惯的老年男性(中位[IQR]年龄:68[64-73]岁;峰值摄氧量(V²峰值):34.1 [29.4-36.1]mLO2·kg-1·min-1),完成连续7天~90分钟温水浸泡(~40°C),最后60分钟核心(直肠)温度保持在~38.5°C。在温水浸泡干预前后,在热干环境(40°C, ~13%相对湿度)中,以增加固定代谢产热率(150、200、250 W·m-2),通过直接量热法在三次30分钟的循环中测量全身总(蒸发+干)热损失,每次休息15分钟。连续测量直肠温度和心率。结果经过7天的温水浸泡后,全身总热损失在运动期间增加了23[95%置信区间:14,31]W·m-2(驯化效应:P < 0.001;交互作用:P = 0.598)。这与核心温度和心率降低0.3[0.2,0.4]°C和11[8,14]次·分钟-1(均为适应效应:P < 0.001;交互作用:P = 0.288)。结论连续7天的温水浸泡改善了习惯运动的老年男性的全身热损失,降低了核心温度和心血管负荷。被动热驯化可能是一种有效的替代运动热驯化,以提高热损失能力。有必要进行研究,以评估在更容易受热影响的人群中的有效性。
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