REPRODUCIBILITY OF CORE TEMPERATURE THRESHOLD FOR SWEATING ONSET IN HUMANS

Citation
Gl. Brengelmann et al., REPRODUCIBILITY OF CORE TEMPERATURE THRESHOLD FOR SWEATING ONSET IN HUMANS, Journal of applied physiology, 77(4), 1994, pp. 1671-1677
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology
ISSN journal
87507587
Volume
77
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
1671 - 1677
Database
ISI
SICI code
8750-7587(1994)77:4<1671:ROCTTF>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
The control of sweating in humans has been described quantitatively in terms of skin and core temperatures (T-sk and T-core, respectively). However, the precision with which features of the relationship between sweat rate and T-core at a given T-sk can be reproduced in the short term is not known. We focused on the threshold T-core. We held T-sk at 38 degrees C until sweating began for two periods separated by a peri od of cooling with T-sk at 32 degrees C in six men and three women. Th e esophageal temperature (T-sk) at which sweating began was invariably lower in the second period of heating (average difference 0.09 degree s C, maximum 0.17 degrees C). Also, the rate of rise in T-es was invar iably higher (average 148%) during the second period of heating. Thus, although a threshold cannot be reproduced within the error of T-es me asurement, the consistency and small magnitude of the downward shift r ecommend our protocol as a practical method for evaluating other influ ences on thermoregulation, provided that the effects are big enough to be seen against a background of an expected small decrease. From the fundamental point of view, the consistency of the downward displacemen t has provocative implications, e.g., the rate of change in T-core inf luences sweating or thermosensitive units in slow-responding thermal c ompartments contribute to the T-core input signal.