Gl. Brengelmann et al., REPRODUCIBILITY OF CORE TEMPERATURE THRESHOLD FOR SWEATING ONSET IN HUMANS, Journal of applied physiology, 77(4), 1994, pp. 1671-1677
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.