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At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females?

Studies have reported that older females have impaired heat loss responses during work in the heat compared to young females. However, it remains unclear at what level of heat stress these differences occur. Therefore, we examined whole-body heat loss [evaporative (H(E)) and dry heat loss, via direc...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stapleton, Jill M., Poirier, Martin P., Flouris, Andreas D., Boulay, Pierre, Sigal, Ronald J., Malcolm, Janine, Kenny, Glen P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4366400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25790024
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119079
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author Stapleton, Jill M.
Poirier, Martin P.
Flouris, Andreas D.
Boulay, Pierre
Sigal, Ronald J.
Malcolm, Janine
Kenny, Glen P.
author_facet Stapleton, Jill M.
Poirier, Martin P.
Flouris, Andreas D.
Boulay, Pierre
Sigal, Ronald J.
Malcolm, Janine
Kenny, Glen P.
author_sort Stapleton, Jill M.
collection PubMed
description Studies have reported that older females have impaired heat loss responses during work in the heat compared to young females. However, it remains unclear at what level of heat stress these differences occur. Therefore, we examined whole-body heat loss [evaporative (H(E)) and dry heat loss, via direct calorimetry] and changes in body heat storage (∆H(b), via direct and indirect calorimetry) in 10 young (23±4 years) and 10 older (58±5 years) females matched for body surface area and aerobic fitness (VO(2)peak) during three 30-min exercise bouts performed at incremental rates of metabolic heat production of 250 (Ex1), 325 (Ex2) and 400 (Ex3) W in the heat (40°C, 15% relative humidity). Exercise bouts were separated by 15 min of recovery. Since dry heat gain was similar between young and older females during exercise (p=0.52) and recovery (p=0.42), differences in whole-body heat loss were solely due to H(E). Our results show that older females had a significantly lower H(E) at the end of Ex2 (young: 383±34 W; older: 343±39 W, p=0.04) and Ex3 (young: 437±36 W; older: 389±29 W, p=0.008), however no difference was measured at the end of Ex1 (p=0.24). Also, the magnitude of difference in the maximal level of H(E) achieved between the young and older females became greater with increasing heat loads (Ex1=10.2%, Ex2=11.6% and Ex3=12.4%). Furthermore, a significantly greater ∆H(b) was measured for all heat loads for the older females (Ex1: 178±44 kJ; Ex2: 151±38 kJ; Ex3: 216±25 kJ, p=0.002) relative to the younger females (Ex1: 127±35 kJ; Ex2: 96±45 kJ; Ex3: 146±46 kJ). In contrast, no differences in H(E) or ∆H(b) were observed during recovery (p>0.05). We show that older habitually active females have an impaired capacity to dissipate heat compared to young females during exercise-induced heat loads of ≥325 W when performed in the heat.
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spelling pubmed-43664002015-03-23 At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females? Stapleton, Jill M. Poirier, Martin P. Flouris, Andreas D. Boulay, Pierre Sigal, Ronald J. Malcolm, Janine Kenny, Glen P. PLoS One Research Article Studies have reported that older females have impaired heat loss responses during work in the heat compared to young females. However, it remains unclear at what level of heat stress these differences occur. Therefore, we examined whole-body heat loss [evaporative (H(E)) and dry heat loss, via direct calorimetry] and changes in body heat storage (∆H(b), via direct and indirect calorimetry) in 10 young (23±4 years) and 10 older (58±5 years) females matched for body surface area and aerobic fitness (VO(2)peak) during three 30-min exercise bouts performed at incremental rates of metabolic heat production of 250 (Ex1), 325 (Ex2) and 400 (Ex3) W in the heat (40°C, 15% relative humidity). Exercise bouts were separated by 15 min of recovery. Since dry heat gain was similar between young and older females during exercise (p=0.52) and recovery (p=0.42), differences in whole-body heat loss were solely due to H(E). Our results show that older females had a significantly lower H(E) at the end of Ex2 (young: 383±34 W; older: 343±39 W, p=0.04) and Ex3 (young: 437±36 W; older: 389±29 W, p=0.008), however no difference was measured at the end of Ex1 (p=0.24). Also, the magnitude of difference in the maximal level of H(E) achieved between the young and older females became greater with increasing heat loads (Ex1=10.2%, Ex2=11.6% and Ex3=12.4%). Furthermore, a significantly greater ∆H(b) was measured for all heat loads for the older females (Ex1: 178±44 kJ; Ex2: 151±38 kJ; Ex3: 216±25 kJ, p=0.002) relative to the younger females (Ex1: 127±35 kJ; Ex2: 96±45 kJ; Ex3: 146±46 kJ). In contrast, no differences in H(E) or ∆H(b) were observed during recovery (p>0.05). We show that older habitually active females have an impaired capacity to dissipate heat compared to young females during exercise-induced heat loads of ≥325 W when performed in the heat. Public Library of Science 2015-03-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4366400/ /pubmed/25790024 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119079 Text en © 2015 Stapleton et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Stapleton, Jill M.
Poirier, Martin P.
Flouris, Andreas D.
Boulay, Pierre
Sigal, Ronald J.
Malcolm, Janine
Kenny, Glen P.
At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females?
title At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females?
title_full At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females?
title_fullStr At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females?
title_full_unstemmed At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females?
title_short At What Level of Heat Load Are Age-Related Impairments in the Ability to Dissipate Heat Evident in Females?
title_sort at what level of heat load are age-related impairments in the ability to dissipate heat evident in females?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4366400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25790024
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119079
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