logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Four-month operational heat acclimatization positively affects the level of heat tolerance 6 months later

Health and Fitness

Four-month operational heat acclimatization positively affects the level of heat tolerance 6 months later

A. Malgoyre, J. Siracusa, et al.

This study reveals significant findings on the long-term effects of heat acclimatization, showing that soldiers with previous heat acclimatization experienced lower body temperatures, heart rates, and perceived exertion during heat stress tests. The authors present compelling evidence that a 4-month heat acclimatization period can provide enduring benefits in heat tolerance.... show more
Abstract
Benefits gained after heat acclimation or acclimatization are typically thought to be completely lost after about 6 weeks, but this estimate is hypothetical. We evaluated the long-term effects of heat acclimatization on heat tolerance. Physiological and subjective markers of heat tolerance were assessed during a heat stress test (HST: three 8-min outdoor runs at approximately 40 °C and 20% relative humidity at 50% of estimated speed at VO2max) performed on the second day upon arrival at a desert military base in the United Arab Emirates after a first day of mostly passive heat exposure. Among 50 male French soldiers, 25 had performed a 4-month military mission in hot climates 6 months prior (HA) and 25 had never been heat acclimatized (CT). Rectal temperature (p = 0.023), heart rate (p = 0.033), and perceived exertion (p = 0.043) were lower in HA than CT at the end of the HST. Soldiers with a previous 4-month period of natural heat acclimatization very likely had higher heat tolerance during exercise in the heat, even 6 months after returning from a desert mission, than non-acclimatized counterparts.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Nov 20, 2020
Authors
Alexandra Malgoyre, Julien Siracusa, Pierre-Emmanuel Tardo-Dino, Sebastian Garcia-Vicencio, Nathalie Koulmann, Yoram Epstein, Keyne Charlot
Tags
heat acclimatization
heat tolerance
soldiers
physiological response
rectal temperature
heart rate
perceived exertion
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny