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Biophysical, thermo-physiological and perceptual determinants of cool-seeking behaviour during exercise in younger and older women

Biophysical, thermo-physiological and perceptual determinants of cool-seeking behaviour during exercise in younger and older women
Biophysical, thermo-physiological and perceptual determinants of cool-seeking behaviour during exercise in younger and older women
Women continue to be under-represented in thermoregulatory research despite their undergoing unique physiological changes across the lifespan. This study investigated the biophysical, thermo-physiological, and perceptual determinants of cool-seeking behaviour during exercise in younger and older women. Eleven younger (25 ± 5 years; 1.7 ± 0.1 m; 63.1 ± 5.2 kg) and 11 older women (53 ± 6 years; 1.7 ± 0.1 m; 65.4 ± 13.9 kg) performed a 40-min incremental cycling test in a thermoneutral environment (22 ± 1.7°C; 36 ± 4% relative humidity). Throughout the test, participants freely adjusted the temperature of a cooling probe applied to their wrists to offset their thermal discomfort. We continuously recorded the probe–wrist interface temperature to quantify participants’ cool-seeking behaviour. We also measured changes in participants’ rate of metabolic heat production, core and mean skin temperatures, and skin wetness. Finally, we body-mapped participants’ skin heat, cold and wetness sensitivity. Our results indicated that: (1) older and younger women exhibited similar onset and magnitude of cool-seeking behaviour, despite older women presented reduced autonomic heat-dissipation responses (i.e., whole-body sweat losses); (2) older women's thermal behaviour was less determined by changes in core temperature (this being a key driver in younger women), and more by changes in multiple thermo-physiological and biophysical parameters (i.e., physical skin wetness, temperature and heat production); (3) older women did not present lower regional skin thermal and wetness sensitivity than younger women. We conclude that predictions of female cool-seeking behaviours based on thermo-physiological variables should consider the effects of ageing. These findings are relevant for the design of wearable cooling systems and sports garments that meet the thermal needs of women across the lifespan.
biophysical cues, exercise, perceptual responses, thermal behaviours, women
0958-0670
Valenza, Alessandro
60b629a5-c527-4137-8efb-6670b165d319
Blount, Hannah
18ae3446-5435-4631-b8df-ee957494c304
Bianco, Antonino
c813a96b-983f-438f-8ee8-36c67746e727
Worsley, Peter R.
6d33aee3-ef43-468d-aef6-86d190de6756
Filingeri, Davide
42502a34-e7e6-4b49-b304-ce2ae0bf7b24
Valenza, Alessandro
60b629a5-c527-4137-8efb-6670b165d319
Blount, Hannah
18ae3446-5435-4631-b8df-ee957494c304
Bianco, Antonino
c813a96b-983f-438f-8ee8-36c67746e727
Worsley, Peter R.
6d33aee3-ef43-468d-aef6-86d190de6756
Filingeri, Davide
42502a34-e7e6-4b49-b304-ce2ae0bf7b24

Valenza, Alessandro, Blount, Hannah, Bianco, Antonino, Worsley, Peter R. and Filingeri, Davide (2023) Biophysical, thermo-physiological and perceptual determinants of cool-seeking behaviour during exercise in younger and older women. Experimental Physiology. (doi:10.1113/EP091533).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Women continue to be under-represented in thermoregulatory research despite their undergoing unique physiological changes across the lifespan. This study investigated the biophysical, thermo-physiological, and perceptual determinants of cool-seeking behaviour during exercise in younger and older women. Eleven younger (25 ± 5 years; 1.7 ± 0.1 m; 63.1 ± 5.2 kg) and 11 older women (53 ± 6 years; 1.7 ± 0.1 m; 65.4 ± 13.9 kg) performed a 40-min incremental cycling test in a thermoneutral environment (22 ± 1.7°C; 36 ± 4% relative humidity). Throughout the test, participants freely adjusted the temperature of a cooling probe applied to their wrists to offset their thermal discomfort. We continuously recorded the probe–wrist interface temperature to quantify participants’ cool-seeking behaviour. We also measured changes in participants’ rate of metabolic heat production, core and mean skin temperatures, and skin wetness. Finally, we body-mapped participants’ skin heat, cold and wetness sensitivity. Our results indicated that: (1) older and younger women exhibited similar onset and magnitude of cool-seeking behaviour, despite older women presented reduced autonomic heat-dissipation responses (i.e., whole-body sweat losses); (2) older women's thermal behaviour was less determined by changes in core temperature (this being a key driver in younger women), and more by changes in multiple thermo-physiological and biophysical parameters (i.e., physical skin wetness, temperature and heat production); (3) older women did not present lower regional skin thermal and wetness sensitivity than younger women. We conclude that predictions of female cool-seeking behaviours based on thermo-physiological variables should consider the effects of ageing. These findings are relevant for the design of wearable cooling systems and sports garments that meet the thermal needs of women across the lifespan.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 October 2023
Published date: 16 November 2023
Keywords: biophysical cues, exercise, perceptual responses, thermal behaviours, women

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484591
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484591
ISSN: 0958-0670
PURE UUID: fc6c3aec-a910-4ffb-800c-d58fd107c8af
ORCID for Hannah Blount: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2419-1716
ORCID for Peter R. Worsley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0145-5042
ORCID for Davide Filingeri: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5652-395X

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Date deposited: 17 Nov 2023 17:56
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:07

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Contributors

Author: Alessandro Valenza
Author: Hannah Blount ORCID iD
Author: Antonino Bianco

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