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1 Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Human Kinetics, 2 Faculty of Medicine, and 3 Faculty of Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa K1N 6N5; and 4 Human Protection and Performance Group, Defence Research and Development Canada-Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M3M 3B9
Seven
subjects (1 woman) performed an incremental isotonic test on a
Kin-Com isokinetic apparatus to determine their maximal oxygen
consumption during bilateral knee extensions
(
O2 sp). A multisensor thermal
probe was inserted into the left vastus medialis (middiaphysis) under
ultrasound guidance. The deepest sensor (tip) was located ~10 mm from
the femur and deep femoral artery (Tmu 10), with
additional sensors located 15 (Tmu 25) and 30 mm
(Tmu 40) from the tip. Esophageal temperature (Tes) was measured as an index of core temperature.
Subjects rested in an upright seated position for 60 min in an ambient
condition of 22°C. They then performed 15 min of isolated bilateral
knee extensions (60% of
O2 sp) on a
Kin-Com, followed by 60 min of recovery. Resting Tes was
36.80°C, whereas Tmu 10, Tmu 25, and
Tmu 40 were 36.14, 35.86, and 35.01°C, respectively.
Exercise resulted in a Tes increase of 0.55°C above preexercise resting, whereas muscle temperature of the exercising leg
increased by 2.00, 2.37, and 3.20°C for Tmu 10,
Tmu 25, and Tmu 40, respectively.
Postexercise Tes showed a rapid decrease followed by a
prolonged sustained elevation ~0.3°C above resting. Muscle
temperature decreased gradually over the course of recovery, with
values remaining significantly elevated by 0.92, 1.05, and 1.77°C for
Tmu 10, Tmu 25, and Tmu 40, respectively, at end of recovery (P < 0.05). These
results suggest that the transfer of residual heat from previously
active musculature may contribute to the sustained elevation in
postexercise Tes.
heat load; thermoregulation; hyperthermia; heat content; heat balance
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