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Short-term heat acclimation is effective and may be enhanced rather than impaired by dehydration
Authors
Armstrong
Armstrong
+85 more
Ashenden
Bergeron
Borg
Brandenberger
Brandenberger
Brengelmann
Buono
Buono
Burge
Casa
Casa
Cheung
Convertino
Convertino
Costill
Cotter
Creasy
Dill
Engell
Epstein
Fellman
Fleming
Fortney
Francesconi
Gabai
Gagge
Garrett
Garrett
Garrett
Gisolfi
Gonzalez-Alonso
Gore
Goulet
Graichen
Greenleaf
Harrison
Harrison
Hopkins
Hopper
Horowitz
Horowitz
Hurwitz
Joyner
Judelson
Kay
Kee-Bum
Kenefick
Lorenzo
Maresh
Marshall
McClung
McConell
Merry
Morris
Moseley
Nadel
Nagashima
Nielsen
Njemini
Noakes
Nose
Oehler
Okazaki
Okazaki
Patterson
Patterson
Patterson
Racinais
Ramanathan
Sawka
Sawka
Sawka
Sawka
Schwimmer
Scoon
Senay
Shido
Shvartz
Strydom
Tetievsky
Turk
Wall
Weller
Witney
Wyndham
Publication date
28 January 2014
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Most heat acclimation data are from regimes longer than 1 week, and acclimation advice is to prevent dehydration. Objectives: We hypothesized that (i) short-term (5-day) heat acclimation would substantially improve physiological strain and exercise tolerance under heat stress, and (ii) dehydration would provide a thermally independent stimulus for adaptation. Methods: Nine aerobically fit males heat acclimated using controlled-hyperthermia (rectal temperature 38.5°C) for 90 min on 5 days; once euhydrated (EUH) and once dehydrated (DEH) during acclimation bouts. Exercising heat stress tests (HSTs) were completed before and after acclimations (90-min cycling in T a 35°C, 60% RH). Results: During acclimation bouts, [aldosterone] plasma rose more across DEH than EUH (95%CI for difference between regimes: 40-411 pg ml -1 ; P=0.03; n=5) and was positively related to plasma volume expansion (r=0.65; P=0.05), which tended to be larger in DEH (CI: -1 to 10%; P=0.06; n=9). In HSTs, resting forearm perfusion increased more in DEH (by 5.9 ml 100 tissue ml -1 min -1 : -11.5 to -1.0; P=0.04) and end-exercise cardiac frequency fell to a greater extent (by 11 b min -1 : -1 to 22; P=0.05). Hydration-related effects on other endocrine, cardiovascular, and psychophysical responses to HSTs were unclear. Rectal temperature was unchanged at rest but was 0.3°C lower at end exercise (P < 0.01; interaction: P=0.52). Conclusions: Short-term (5-day) heat acclimation induced effective adaptations, some of which were more pronounced after fluid-regulatory strain from permissive dehydration, and not attributable to dehydration effects on body temperature. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 26:311-320, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc
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info:doi/10.1002%2Fajhb.22509
Last time updated on 13/11/2020
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