The interrelationship between air temperature and humidity as applied locally to the skin: the resultant response on skin temperature and blood flow with age differences

Most studies of the skin and how it responds to local heat have been conducted with either water, thermodes, or dry heat packs. Very little has been accomplished to look at the interaction between air humidity and temperature on skin temperature and blood flow. With variable air temperatures and hum...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Medical science monitor 2012-04, Vol.18 (4), p.CR201-CR208
Hauptverfasser: Petrofsky, Jerrold S, Berk, Lee, Alshammari, Faris, Lee, Haneul, Hamdan, Adel, Yim, Jong Eun, Kodawala, Yusufi, Patel, Dennis, Nevgi, Bhakti, Shetye, Gauri, Moniz, Harold, Chen, Wei Ti, Alshaharani, Mastour, Pathak, Kunal, Neupane, Sushma, Somanaboina, Karunakar, Shenoy, Samruddha, Cho, Sungwan, Dave, Bargav, Desai, Rajavi, Malthane, Swapnil, Al-Nakhli, Hani
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Most studies of the skin and how it responds to local heat have been conducted with either water, thermodes, or dry heat packs. Very little has been accomplished to look at the interaction between air humidity and temperature on skin temperature and blood flow. With variable air temperatures and humidity's around the world, this, in many ways, is a more realistic assessment of environmental impact than previous water bath studies. Eight young and 8 older subjects were examined in an extensive series of experiments where on different days, air temperature was 38, 40, or 42°C. and at each temperature, humidity was either 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, or 100% humidity. Over a 20 minute period of exposure, the response of the skin in terms of its temperature and blood flow was assessed. For both younger and older subjects, for air temperatures of 38 and 40°C., the humidity of the air had no effect on the blood flow response of the skin, while skin temperature at the highest humidity was elevated slightly. However, for air temperatures of 42°C., at 100% humidity, there was a significant elevation in skin blood flow and skin temperature above the other four air humidity's (p
ISSN:1234-1010
1643-3750
DOI:10.12659/MSM.882619