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Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure

We sought to examine whether short-term, whole body cold acclimation would modulate finger vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to localized cooling. Fourteen men were equally assigned to either the experimental (CA) or the control (CON) group. The CA group was immersed to the chest in 14°C water fo...

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Autores principales: Keramidas, Michail E., Kölegård, Roger, Gäng, Pit, Wilkins, Frederick, Elia, Antonis, Eiken, Ola
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Physiological Society 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9190731/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35502861
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00021.2022
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author Keramidas, Michail E.
Kölegård, Roger
Gäng, Pit
Wilkins, Frederick
Elia, Antonis
Eiken, Ola
author_facet Keramidas, Michail E.
Kölegård, Roger
Gäng, Pit
Wilkins, Frederick
Elia, Antonis
Eiken, Ola
author_sort Keramidas, Michail E.
collection PubMed
description We sought to examine whether short-term, whole body cold acclimation would modulate finger vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to localized cooling. Fourteen men were equally assigned to either the experimental (CA) or the control (CON) group. The CA group was immersed to the chest in 14°C water for ≤120 min daily over a 5-day period while the skin temperature of the right-hand fingers was clamped at ∼35.5°C. The CON group was instructed to avoid any cold exposure during this period. Before and after the intervention, both groups performed, on two different consecutive days, a local cold provocation trial consisting of a 30-min hand immersion in 8°C water while immersed to the chest once in 21°C (mild-hypothermic trial; 0.5°C fall in rectal temperature from individual preimmersion values) and on the other occasion in 35.5°C (normothermic trial). In the CA group, the cold-induced reduction in finger temperature was less (mild-hypothermic trial: P = 0.05; normothermic trial: P = 0.02), and the incidence of the cold-induced vasodilation episodes was greater (in normothermic trials: P = 0.04) in the post- than in the preacclimation trials. The right-hand thermal discomfort was also attenuated (mild-hypothermic trial: P = 0.04; normothermic trial: P = 0.01). The finger temperature responses of the CON group did not vary between testing periods. Our findings suggest that repetitive whole body exposure to severe cold within a week may attenuate finger vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to localized cooling. These regional thermo-adaptions were ascribed to central neural habituation produced by the iterative, generalized cold stimulation.
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spelling pubmed-91907312022-07-06 Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure Keramidas, Michail E. Kölegård, Roger Gäng, Pit Wilkins, Frederick Elia, Antonis Eiken, Ola Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol Research Article We sought to examine whether short-term, whole body cold acclimation would modulate finger vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to localized cooling. Fourteen men were equally assigned to either the experimental (CA) or the control (CON) group. The CA group was immersed to the chest in 14°C water for ≤120 min daily over a 5-day period while the skin temperature of the right-hand fingers was clamped at ∼35.5°C. The CON group was instructed to avoid any cold exposure during this period. Before and after the intervention, both groups performed, on two different consecutive days, a local cold provocation trial consisting of a 30-min hand immersion in 8°C water while immersed to the chest once in 21°C (mild-hypothermic trial; 0.5°C fall in rectal temperature from individual preimmersion values) and on the other occasion in 35.5°C (normothermic trial). In the CA group, the cold-induced reduction in finger temperature was less (mild-hypothermic trial: P = 0.05; normothermic trial: P = 0.02), and the incidence of the cold-induced vasodilation episodes was greater (in normothermic trials: P = 0.04) in the post- than in the preacclimation trials. The right-hand thermal discomfort was also attenuated (mild-hypothermic trial: P = 0.04; normothermic trial: P = 0.01). The finger temperature responses of the CON group did not vary between testing periods. Our findings suggest that repetitive whole body exposure to severe cold within a week may attenuate finger vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to localized cooling. These regional thermo-adaptions were ascribed to central neural habituation produced by the iterative, generalized cold stimulation. American Physiological Society 2022-07-01 2022-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9190731/ /pubmed/35502861 http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00021.2022 Text en Copyright © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . Published by the American Physiological Society.
spellingShingle Research Article
Keramidas, Michail E.
Kölegård, Roger
Gäng, Pit
Wilkins, Frederick
Elia, Antonis
Eiken, Ola
Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure
title Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure
title_full Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure
title_fullStr Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure
title_full_unstemmed Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure
title_short Acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure
title_sort acral skin vasoreactivity and thermosensitivity to hand cooling following 5 days of intermittent whole body cold exposure
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9190731/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35502861
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00021.2022
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