The effect of repeated hot water immersion on vascular function, blood pressure and central haemodynamics in individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus
The effect of repeated hot water immersion on vascular function, blood pressure and central haemodynamics in individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is characterised by endothelial dysfunction, leading to increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Emerging evidence suggest that HWI may favourably improve vascular function but data are limited in individual with T2DM. The aim was to investigate whether repeated hot water immersion (HWI) improved macrovascular, microvascular and central haemodynamic function in individuals with T2DM.
Fourteen individuals completed a pre-post experimental study where participants were assessed pre- and post-8-10 × 1 h HWI sessions (40 °C water) undertaken within a 14-day period. During HWIs, body position was adjusted to clamp rectal temperature at 38.5–39.0 °C for the duration of the immersion. Stroke volume index (SVi), cardiac index (i), resting heart rate (HR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP), brachial flow-mediated dilation (FMD) and cutaneous microvascular endothelial function (via transdermal iontophoresis) and plasma [nitrate] and [nitrite] (NOX; via ozone chemiluminescence) were assessed pre- and post HWI.
Neither brachial FMD measures of macrovascular endothelial function (p = 0.43) or forearm microvascular function (ACh max, p = 0.63; ACh area under curve (AUC), p = 0.63; insulin max, p = 0.51; insulin AUC, p = 0.86) or NOX (p = 0.38) were changed. i (p < 0.01), SVi (p < 0.02) and resting HR (p < 0.01) were all significantly reduced following the 10-days HWI intervention. SBP was reduced (p = 0.03), whereas DBP was unchanged (p = 0.56). HWI may represent an appropriate intervention to improve I, SVi and BP in individuals with T2DM, but not macrovascular endothelial or cutaneous microvascular function.
James, Thomas J.
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Corbett, Jo
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Cummings, Michael
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Allard, Sharon
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Bailey, Stephen J.
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Eglin, Clare
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Belcher, Harvey
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Piccolo, Daniel D.
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Tipton, Mike
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Perissiou, Maria
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Saynor, Zoe L.
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Shepherd, Anthony I.
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5 December 2024
James, Thomas J.
99206e18-428e-4c11-b700-3c1b90aec514
Corbett, Jo
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Cummings, Michael
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Allard, Sharon
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Bailey, Stephen J.
633b20ff-c173-4c2e-98ad-93a57a4c9556
Eglin, Clare
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Belcher, Harvey
09755dfc-7956-4558-b657-998f8fa7c8e5
Piccolo, Daniel D.
b95f446f-094e-40d8-8340-63e5940f697f
Tipton, Mike
2cc2fa31-9fdf-497d-acf0-18d935bb6db5
Perissiou, Maria
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Saynor, Zoe L.
a4357c7d-db59-4fa5-b24f-58d2f7e74e39
Shepherd, Anthony I.
7103ee4b-4fb4-41e0-8f00-9e647e15b3fb
James, Thomas J., Corbett, Jo, Cummings, Michael, Allard, Sharon, Bailey, Stephen J., Eglin, Clare, Belcher, Harvey, Piccolo, Daniel D., Tipton, Mike, Perissiou, Maria, Saynor, Zoe L. and Shepherd, Anthony I.
(2024)
The effect of repeated hot water immersion on vascular function, blood pressure and central haemodynamics in individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Journal of Thermal Biology, 126, [104017].
(doi:10.1016/j.jtherbio.2024.104017).
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is characterised by endothelial dysfunction, leading to increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Emerging evidence suggest that HWI may favourably improve vascular function but data are limited in individual with T2DM. The aim was to investigate whether repeated hot water immersion (HWI) improved macrovascular, microvascular and central haemodynamic function in individuals with T2DM.
Fourteen individuals completed a pre-post experimental study where participants were assessed pre- and post-8-10 × 1 h HWI sessions (40 °C water) undertaken within a 14-day period. During HWIs, body position was adjusted to clamp rectal temperature at 38.5–39.0 °C for the duration of the immersion. Stroke volume index (SVi), cardiac index (i), resting heart rate (HR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP), brachial flow-mediated dilation (FMD) and cutaneous microvascular endothelial function (via transdermal iontophoresis) and plasma [nitrate] and [nitrite] (NOX; via ozone chemiluminescence) were assessed pre- and post HWI.
Neither brachial FMD measures of macrovascular endothelial function (p = 0.43) or forearm microvascular function (ACh max, p = 0.63; ACh area under curve (AUC), p = 0.63; insulin max, p = 0.51; insulin AUC, p = 0.86) or NOX (p = 0.38) were changed. i (p < 0.01), SVi (p < 0.02) and resting HR (p < 0.01) were all significantly reduced following the 10-days HWI intervention. SBP was reduced (p = 0.03), whereas DBP was unchanged (p = 0.56). HWI may represent an appropriate intervention to improve I, SVi and BP in individuals with T2DM, but not macrovascular endothelial or cutaneous microvascular function.
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 November 2024
Published date: 5 December 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 497081
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497081
ISSN: 0306-4565
PURE UUID: 062973df-1f5e-4d39-8b7d-54faaac86b2a
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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2025 16:06
Last modified: 21 Aug 2025 02:50
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Author:
Thomas J. James
Author:
Jo Corbett
Author:
Michael Cummings
Author:
Sharon Allard
Author:
Stephen J. Bailey
Author:
Clare Eglin
Author:
Harvey Belcher
Author:
Daniel D. Piccolo
Author:
Mike Tipton
Author:
Maria Perissiou
Author:
Zoe L. Saynor
Author:
Anthony I. Shepherd
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