Thermoregulation 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Environmental heat strain and exercise

A
  • Strain - collection of environmental factors
  • Stress - bodies response
  • Three factors - ambient temperature, ambient humidity and wind velocity
  • As temperature increases heat strain increases - exponential (when temp exceeds 15oC)
  • More linear relationship between humidity and heat strain
    • Humidity - Content of water in the air
  • Both humidity and temperature drive heat strain up
  • As you increase wind velocity, increases heat loss (beneficial in warmer climates, not so much in colder climates)
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2
Q

Ambient temperature effects on exercise responses

  • Endurance
  • Skin temp
  • Core temp
A

Study

  • Took 8 male subjects - exercised at 70% VO2max at different temperatures - moderate to high intensity
  • Endurance was highest at 11 C
  • Ambient has a very large effect on endurance
  • At neural temperature (21 degrees), skin temp fell immediately at the start of exercise and rebounds back up.
  • Skin temp increases at the start of exercise at ambient temp of 31 degrees and then stabilises
  • Core temperatures increases regardless of ambient temperature and stabilises at 4, 11, and 21 degrees
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3
Q

Ambient humidity effects in exercise response

  • Core temp
  • Skim temp
  • Endurance
A
  • Chamber temperature - 30 degrees
  • Air velocity - 1 m/s
  • 8 male subjects
  • Exercising at 70% VO2max
  • Humidity levels: 24%, 40%, 60%, & 80%
  • 24% - core temp tends to be slightly lower
  • 40%, 60% & 80% - core temp is higher but there is a progressive reduction in how long they can maintain exercise
  • As the humidity increases the skin temp increases
  • As humidity increases the endurance decreases (endurance in impaired progressively from low levels of 24% to 80%)
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4
Q

Physics of environment effects on core temperature

  • convection
  • Humidity and sweat

HINT: gradient

A
  • Gradient between the skin and core is 5 degrees
  • Convection - transfer of heat from the core to the skin (surface) via blood flow
  • You can only lose heat to the surroundings if the ambient temperature is less than the skin temperature (positive gradient)
  • If ambient temp is higher than skin temp, we absorb heat
  • The rate at which sweat vaporises depends on humidity ( has to be less than 100%)
  • The lower the humidity the higher the rate of sweat vaporisation.
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5
Q

Heat Acclimatisation

A

With heat acclimatisation, core temperature raises less steeply and stabilizes and skin temperature raises less steeply, stabilises and then comes back down. sweat sensitivity is higher

45 degree heat exposure: sustain exercise for 4 hours, lower core temperature, and skin temperature. significantly greater sweating sensitivity

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6
Q

Cell homeostasis to systemic regulation

A

Homeostasis - keeping the environment of the cell under the conditions in which that cell can operate most effectively

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7
Q

Thermostat Model I

A

Our bodies regulates itself to maintain core temperature

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8
Q

Thermostat Model II

A
  • Set-point temperature is the core temperature
  • The body will respond to variations in core temperature
  • The main region that controls the set-point temperature is the hypothalamus

Less than set point -> Decrease heat loss & increased heat gain ->

More than set point -> Increased heat loss

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9
Q

Thermoregulation

A
  • Metabolism: increases when ambient temp is less than 18 degrees
  • Sweating: increases when ambient temperature is 30 degrees
  • Skin blood flow: Increases when ambient temperature is 30 degrees
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10
Q

Temperature control mechanism

  • controller
  • sensor
  • effectors
A
  • Neural controller - hypothalamus & preoptic nucleus
  • Temperature sensors
    • Cerebral blood temperature (the blood the hypothalamus is sensing) (core temp)
    • Deep Nerve afferents - lie in deep tissue (thorax and abdomen) (core temp)
    • Skin nerve afferent - respond to changes in skin temperature
  • Temperature effectors (bring about the adjustment in temperature)
    • Sweating & skin blood flow
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11
Q

Temperature and water

A
  • Anterior nucleus - coping in the heat
  • Posterior nucleus - coping in the cold
  • Paraventricular and supraoptic nucleii - they receive information about the water content in the body and they also influence a response to try and either conserve water or get rid of water
  • Close relationship between thermoregulation and water balance
  • They work as a unit
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12
Q

Threshold and sensitivities

  • Cutaneous vasodilation
  • Sweating
A
  • Cutaneous vasodilation - dilation of blood vessels in the skin
    • If you increase core temp you increase vasodilation and therefore increase blood flow
    • Threshold - 37 and therefore becomes sensitive after 37
  • Sweating
    • Any temp less than normal core temp does not trigger sweating
    • Just above core temperature when sweating starts and increases as a function of temperature
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13
Q

Adaptation

  • Training
  • Heat acclimation
  • Control
A
  • Training & heat acclimation - increase in sensitivity and decreases threshold (sweating occurs earlier)
  • Heat acclimation - threshold is lower than both training and control - 37 degrees
    Control is 37.5 (dramatic increase in sweating and skin blood flow)
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