Journal of Applied Physiology AJP: Cell Physiology
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J Appl Physiol (June 6, 2003). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00063.2003
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Submitted on January 24, 2003
Accepted on May 1, 2003

Heat acclimation increases skin vasodilation and sweating but not cardiac baroreflex responses in heat-stressed humans

Fumio Yamazaki1* and Kunshige Hamasaki1

1 Department of Clinical Pathophysiology, School of Health Sciences, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, Japan

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Yamazaki{at}health.uoeh-u.ac.jp.

In the present study, to test the hypothesis that exercise-heat acclimation increases orthostatic tolerance via the improvement of cardiac baroreflex control in heated humans, we examined cardiac baroreflex and thermoregulatory responses, including cutaneous vasomotor and sudomotor responses, during whole body heating before and after a 6-day exercise-heat acclimation program [4 bouts of 20-min exercise at 50% peak rate of oxygen consumption separated by 10 min rest in the heat (36°C; 50% relative humidity)]. Ten healthy young volunteers participated in the study. On the test days before and after the heat acclimation program, subjects underwent whole body heat stress produced by a hot water-perfused suit during supine rest for 45 min and 75° head-up tilt (HUT) for 6 min. The sensitivity of the arterial baroreflex control of heart rate (HR) was calculated from the spontaneous changes in beat-to-beat arterial pressure and HR. The HUT induced a presyncopal sign in 7 subjects in the preacclimation test and in 6 subjects in the postacclimation test, and the tilting time did not differ significantly between the pre- (241±33 s) and postacclimation (283±24 s) tests. Heat acclimation did not change the slope in the HR-esophageal temperature (Tes) relation and the cardiac baroreflex sensitivity during heating. Heat acclimation decreased (P<0.05) the Tes thresholds for cutaneous vasodilation in the forearm and dorsal hand and for sweating in the forearm and chest. These findings suggest that short-term heat acclimation does not alter the spontaneous baroreflex control of HR during heat stress, although it induces adaptive change of the heat dissipation response in nonglabrous skin.




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