Thermogenic responses to different clamped skin temperatures in cold-exposed men and women

Despite many decades of research examining thermoregulatory responses under varying cold stresses in humans, very little is known about the variability in metabolic heat production and shivering activity. Here, we used a novel closed-loop mean skin temperature clamping technique with a liquid-condit...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology integrative and comparative physiology, 2022-07, Vol.323 (1), p.R149-R160
Hauptverfasser: Dumont, Lauralyne, Lessard, Raphael, Semeniuk, Kevin, Chahrour, Houssein, McCormick, James J, Acosta, Francisco M, Blondin, Denis P, Haman, Francois
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite many decades of research examining thermoregulatory responses under varying cold stresses in humans, very little is known about the variability in metabolic heat production and shivering activity. Here, we used a novel closed-loop mean skin temperature clamping technique with a liquid-conditioned suit to isolate the effects of mean skin temperature on the subjective evaluation of thermal sensation, heat production, shivering responses, and oxidative fuel selection in young, lean and healthy men (n = 12) and women (n = 12). Our results showed a skin temperature-dependent increase in metabolic heat production (5.2±1.0 kJ/min, 5.9±1.0 kJ/min and 7.0±1.0 kJ/min with skin temperature maintained at 31°C, 29°C and 27°C, respectively; P< 0.0001) and shivering intensity in both men and women (0.6±0.1 %MVC, 1.1±0.4 %MVC and 2.5±0.7 %MVC, respectively; P
ISSN:0363-6119
1522-1490
DOI:10.1152/ajpregu.00268.2021