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Hypoxia gradually augments metabolic and thermoperceptual responsiveness to repeated whole‐body cold stress in humans
Author(s) -
Keramidas Michail E.,
Kölegård Roger,
Eiken Ola
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
experimental physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.925
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1469-445X
pISSN - 0958-0670
DOI - 10.1113/ep089070
Subject(s) - hypoxia (environmental) , medicine , anesthesia , cardiology , chemistry , oxygen , organic chemistry
New FindingsWhat is the central question of this study? In male lowlanders, does hypoxia modulate thermoregulatory effector responses during repeated whole‐body cold stress encountered in a single day?What is the main finding and its importance? A ∼10 h sustained exposure to hypoxia appears to mediate a gradual upregulation of endogenous heat production, preventing the progressive hypothermic response prompted by serial cold stimuli. Also, hypoxia progressively degrades mood, and compounds the perceived thermal discomfort, and sensations of fatigue and coldness.Abstract We examined whether hypoxia would modulate thermoeffector responses during repeated cold stress encountered in a single day. Eleven men completed two ∼10 h sessions, while breathing, in normobaria, either normoxia or hypoxia ( P O 2 : 12 kPa). During each session, subjects underwent sequentially three 120 min immersions to the chest in 20°C water (CWI), interspersed by 120 min rewarming. In normoxia, the final drop in rectal temperature ( T rec ) was greater in the third (∼1.2°C) than in the first and second (∼0.9°C) CWIs ( P  < 0.05). The first hypoxic CWI augmented the T rec fall (∼1.2°C; P  = 0.002), but the drop in T rec did not vary between the three hypoxic CWIs ( P  = 0.99). In normoxia, the metabolic heat production ( M ̇ ) was greater during the first half of the third CWI than during the corresponding part of the first CWI ( P  = 0.02); yet the difference was blunted during the second half of the CWIs ( P  = 0.89). In hypoxia, by contrast, the increase in M ̇ was augmented by ∼25% throughout the third CWI ( P  < 0.01). Regardless of the breathing condition, the cold‐induced elevation in mean arterial pressure was blunted in the second and third CWI ( P  < 0.05). Hypoxia aggravated the sensation of coldness ( P  = 0.05) and thermal discomfort ( P  = 0.04) during the second half of the third CWI. The present findings therefore demonstrate that prolonged hypoxia mediates, in a gradual manner, metabolic and thermoperceptual sensitization to repeated cold stress.

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