Summary
Body temperature regulation was studied in 6 male subjects during an acclimation procedure involving uninterrupted heat exposure for 5 successive days and nights in a hot dry environment (ambient temperature =35° C, dew-point temperature =7° C; air velocity = 0.2 m·s−1). Data were obtained at rest and during exercise (relative mechanical workload =35% \(\dot V_{{\text{O}}_{{\text{2 max}}} } \)). At rest, hourly measurements were made of oesophageal and 4 local skin temperatures, to allow the calculation of mean skin temperature, and of body motility and heart rate. During the working periods these measurements were made at 5 min intervals. Hourly whole-body weight loss was measured at rest on a sensitive platform scale while in the working condition just before starting and immediately after completing the bicycle exercise. The results show that, in both exercise and at rest, the successive heat exposures increased the sweat gland output during the first 3 days. Afterwards, sweat rate decreased without any corresponding change, in body temperature. For the fixed workload, the sweat rate decline was associated with a decrease in circulatory strain. Adjustments in both sweating and circulatory mechanisms occur in the first 3 days of continuous heat exposure. The overall sweat rate decline could involve a redistribution of the regional sweating rates which enhances the sweat gland activities of skin areas with maximal evaporative efficiencies.
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Libert, J.P., Amoros, C., Di Nisi, J. et al. Thermoregulatory adjustments during continuous heat exposure. Europ. J. Appl. Physiol. 57, 499–506 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00417999
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00417999