Body Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during Exercise

Ingestion of cold (<10°C) compared to warm (>37°C) fluid has been suggested to attenuate heat storage levels during exercise. However, modulations in sweat output may yield differences in evaporative heat loss that are greater than differences in heat transfer with the ingested fluid. The purp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bain, Anthony R
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20583
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.-en#10393-205832013-01-11T13:33:12ZBody Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during ExerciseBain, Anthony RSweatingDrink temperatureExerciseHeat storageThermoregulationIngestion of cold (<10°C) compared to warm (>37°C) fluid has been suggested to attenuate heat storage levels during exercise. However, modulations in sweat output may yield differences in evaporative heat loss that are greater than differences in heat transfer with the ingested fluid. The purpose of the thesis was to evaluate thermoregulatory control and human heat balance, and compare thermometrically derived values of heat storage with those derived from partitional calorimetry following water ingestion of varying temperature during exercise. We found that water ingestion of 50°C compared to 1.5°C decreases heat storage in thermoneutral environments, and further exacerbates the error of thermometric heat storage estimations. Differences in heat storage were attributed exclusively to disproportionate reductions in whole-body and local sweat output and thus evaporative heat loss potential. Ingested fluid temperature only minimally altered skin blood flow and did not influence dry heat exchange with the ambient environment.2012-01-18T20:43:38Z2012-01-18T20:43:38Z20122012-01-18http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20583en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Sweating
Drink temperature
Exercise
Heat storage
Thermoregulation
spellingShingle Sweating
Drink temperature
Exercise
Heat storage
Thermoregulation
Bain, Anthony R
Body Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during Exercise
description Ingestion of cold (<10°C) compared to warm (>37°C) fluid has been suggested to attenuate heat storage levels during exercise. However, modulations in sweat output may yield differences in evaporative heat loss that are greater than differences in heat transfer with the ingested fluid. The purpose of the thesis was to evaluate thermoregulatory control and human heat balance, and compare thermometrically derived values of heat storage with those derived from partitional calorimetry following water ingestion of varying temperature during exercise. We found that water ingestion of 50°C compared to 1.5°C decreases heat storage in thermoneutral environments, and further exacerbates the error of thermometric heat storage estimations. Differences in heat storage were attributed exclusively to disproportionate reductions in whole-body and local sweat output and thus evaporative heat loss potential. Ingested fluid temperature only minimally altered skin blood flow and did not influence dry heat exchange with the ambient environment.
author Bain, Anthony R
author_facet Bain, Anthony R
author_sort Bain, Anthony R
title Body Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during Exercise
title_short Body Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during Exercise
title_full Body Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during Exercise
title_fullStr Body Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during Exercise
title_full_unstemmed Body Heat Storage, Sweating and Skin Blood Flow Responses Following Cold and Warm Water Ingestion during Exercise
title_sort body heat storage, sweating and skin blood flow responses following cold and warm water ingestion during exercise
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20583
work_keys_str_mv AT bainanthonyr bodyheatstoragesweatingandskinbloodflowresponsesfollowingcoldandwarmwateringestionduringexercise
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