상세검색
최근 검색어 전체 삭제
다국어입력
즐겨찾기0
학술저널

Seasonal Acclimatization in Summer versus Winter to Changes in the Sweating Response during Passive Heating in Korean Young Adult Men

Seasonal Acclimatization in Summer versus Winter to Changes in the Sweating Response during Passive Heating in Korean Young Adult Men

  • 8
커버이미지 없음

We investigated the sweating response during passive heating (partial submersion up to the umbilical line in 42±0.5oC water, 30 min) after summer and winter seasonal acclimatization (SA). Testing was performed in July during the summer, 2011 [summer-SA; temp, 25.6±1.8oC; relative humidity (RH), 82.1±8.2%] and in January during the winter, 2012 (winter-SA; temp, −2.7±2.9oC; RH, 65.0±13.1%) in Cheonan (126o52 N, 33.38 E), Republic of Korea. All experiments were carried out in an automated climatic chamber (temp, 25.0±0.5oC: RH, 60.0±3.0%). Fifteen healthy men (age, 23.4±2.5 years; height, 175.0±5.9 cm; weight, 65.3±6.1 kg) participated in the study. Local sweat onset time was delayed during winter-SA compared to that after summer-SA (p<0.001). Local sweat volume, whole body sweat volume, and evaporative loss volume decreased significantly after winter-SA compared to those after summer-SA (p<0.001). Changes in basal metabolic rate increased significantly after winter-SA (p<0.001), and tympanic temperature and mean body temperature were significantly lower after summer-SA (p<0.05). In conclusion, central sudomotor acitivity becomes sensitive to summer-SA and blunt to winter-SA in Rebubic of Korea. These results suggest that the body adjusts its temperature by economically controlling the sweating rate but does not lower the thermal dissipation rate through a more effective evaporation scheme after summer-SA than that after winter-SA.

(0)

(0)

로딩중