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J Appl Physiol (July 19, 2007). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00931.2006
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Submitted on August 22, 2006
Accepted on July 6, 2007

FUELING SHIVERING THERMOGENESIS DURING PASSIVE HYPOTHERMIC RECOVERY

Francois Haman1*, Chris G. Scott2, and Glen P. Kenny3

1 Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
2 School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
3 School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Canada

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: fhaman{at}uottawa.ca.

In humans, the relative importance of oxidative fuels for sustaining shivering during passive hypothermic recovery or rewarming is still unclear. The main goals of this study were: 1) to quantify the respective contributions of lipids and CHO during passive rewarming and 2) to determine the effects of pre-cooling exercise on the pattern of fuel utilization. Using indirect calorimetry methodologies, changes in fuel metabolism were quantified in non-acclimatized adult men shivering to rewarm from moderate-hypothermia (core temperature {bsim}34.5°C) not following (CON) or following a pre-cooling exercise at 75% VO2max for 15 min (Pre-CE). As hypothermic individuals shiver to normothermia, results showed that carbohydrates (CHO) dominate at all shivering intensities above 50%Shivpeak, while lipids were preferred at lower intensities. This change in the relative importance of CHO and lipids to total heat production was dictated entirely by modulating CHO oxidation rate which decreased by as much as 10-fold from the beginning to the end of rewarming (from 1611±396 to 141±361 mg·min-1 for CON and 1555±230 to 207±261 mg·min-1 for Pre-CE). In contrast, lipid oxidation rate remained constant and low (relatively to maximal rates at exercise) throughout rewarming averaging 183±141 for CON and 207±118 mg lipids min-1 for Pre-CE. In addition, this pattern of fuel selection remained the same between treatments. We concluded that fuel selection is regulated entirely by changes in CHO oxidation rate. Further research should focus on establishing the exact regulatory processes involved in achieving this large upregulation of CHO utilization rate following hypothermia.







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