
The use of infrared thermography to detect the skin temperature response to physical activity
Author(s) -
Giovanni Tanda
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of physics. conference series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.21
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1742-6596
pISSN - 1742-6588
DOI - 10.1088/1742-6596/655/1/012062
Subject(s) - thermography , skin temperature , thermoregulation , treadmill , vasoconstriction , blood flow , intensity (physics) , physical exercise , biomedical engineering , medicine , physical therapy , cardiology , physical medicine and rehabilitation , infrared , physics , optics
Physical activity has a noticeable effect on skin blood flow and temperature. The\udthermal regulatory and hemodynamic processes during physical activity are controlled by two\udconflicting mechanisms: the skin vasoconstriction induced by the blood flow demand to active\udmuscles and the skin vasodilation required by thermoregulation to increase warm blood flow\udand heat conduction to the skin. The time-evolution of skin temperature during exercise can\udgive useful information about the adaptation of the subject as a function of specific type,\udintensity and duration of exercise. In this paper, infrared thermography is used to investigate\udthe thermal response of skin temperature during running exercise on treadmill for a group of\udseven healthy and trained runners. Two different treadmill exercises are considered: a graded\udload exercise and a constant load exercise; for both exercises the duration was 30 minutes.\udWithin the limits due to the relatively small size of the sample group, results typically indicate\uda fall in skin temperature during the initial stage of running exercise. As the exercise\udprogresses, the dynamics of the skin temperature response depends on the type of exercise\ud(graded versus constant load) and probably on the level of training of the subject