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Abstract

This study examined whether palm cooling (PC) could reduce heat strain, measured through changes in core, mean skin, mean body temperatures, and thermal sensation in resting hyperthermic subjects wearing chemical protective garments. Ten male subjects performed three exercise bouts (6.1 km h^sup -1^, 2-4% grade) in a hot, dry environment [mean (SD) air temperature 42.2 (0.5°C), relative humidity 36.5 (1%)] until core temperature reached 38.8°C. Subjects then simulated transport in an armoured vehicle by resting in a seated position for 50 min with either no cooling (NC), (PC at 10°C) or palm cooling with vacuum application around the hand (PCVAC, 10°C, 7.47 kPa negative pressure). Core, skin, and mean body temperatures with PC and PCVAC were lower (P < 0.05) than NC from 15 to 50 min of cooling, and thermal sensation was lower (P < 0.05) from 30 to 50 min, with no differences in any variables between PC and PCVAC. Maximal heat extraction averaged 42 (12 W), and core temperature was reduced by 0.38 (0.21°C) after 50 min of PC. Heat extraction with PC was modest compared to other cooling approaches in the literature.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Palm cooling to reduce heat strain in subjects during simulated armoured vehicle transport
Author
Kuennen, Matthew R; Gillum, Trevor L; Amorim, Fabiano T; Kwon, Young Sub; Schneider, Suzanne M
Pages
1217-23
Publication year
2010
Publication date
Apr 2010
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
14396319
e-ISSN
14396327
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
203288376
Copyright
Springer-Verlag 2010