The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

The effect of hyperthermia with localised head and neck cooling on neuromuscular function

The effect of hyperthermia with localised head and neck cooling on neuromuscular function
The effect of hyperthermia with localised head and neck cooling on neuromuscular function
Introduction: hyperthermia reduces volitional force production, voluntary muscle activation and agonist-electromyography (EMG) during a sustained maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) [1], [2]. This reduction in neuromuscular function may explain a reduced exercise capacity in the heat. Cooling of the neck has been shown to improve running capacity in the heat [3]; however the mechanism is unknown. The aim of the study was to investigate whether localised cooling of the head and neck during hyperthermia would affect neuromuscular function following 60 min of cycling in the heat.

Methods: fourteen male participants exercised on a cycle ergometer for 60 min at 50% ̇V̇O2max in three experimental conditions; hot (35 °C, 50% rh; HOT), hot with head and neck cooling (35 °C, 50% rh; HOTcooling) and control (18 °C, 50% rh; CON). Immediately after the cycling bout, participants performed a 120-s sustained isometric MVC of the knee extensors of their dominant limb. Neuromuscular activation was assessed during the MVC at 5, 30, 90 and 120-s by superimposing supra-maximal triplet (3 impulses at 100 Hz) contractions by electrical stimulation of the femoral nerve, and calculating the central activation ratio (CAR). EMG amplitude (normalised to maximal M-wave) of the 3 superficial quadriceps heads was recorded throughout the MVC. Rectal temperature (Tre) was measured throughout each condition.

Results: Tre was raised in both the HOT (39.27 (0.52) °C) and HOTcooling (39.19 (0.56) °C) trials vs CON (38.07 (0.28) °C) immediately post cycling (P <0.001) and remained elevated during the 120-s MVC. Force declined throughout the MVC in all conditions (Fig 1). The decline in force was on average 18 and 13.6% greater in HOT and HOTcooling respectively compared to CON (Fig.1; P <0.001 for both). This was similar for voluntary activation, with significant reductions in HOT vs CON trials across all time points (P <0.001). Normalised agonist EMG showed significant differences between HOT vs CON throughout the first 60-s of contraction; thereafter a reduced neural drive in all conditions was similar.

Discussion: cooling had no physiological effect on Tre during hyperthermia trials. HOT appeared to show the greatest decline in voluntary force and was associated with a greater decline in CAR and normalised EMG in comparison to CON. The higher force output for HOTcooling may be explained by improved neural drive of the central nervous system to voluntarily activated muscles.

Conclusion: localised head and neck cooling improves neuromuscular function of the knee extensors during a sustained MVC under hyperthermic conditions.
Gordon, Ralph
00e4cfb1-43a6-4702-acd1-e6f2643f7531
Tillin, Neale Anthony
da771b23-7207-400b-aa1d-4a07c82aaaab
Hall, Jamie
91333048-f97f-4225-9acb-5d891bed65c3
Clifford, Kelly-Anne
be53c1c9-6e3d-4ba1-b715-05e929fd601a
Tyler, Christopher James
9faa5e93-c463-482f-add9-92dea169d167
Gordon, Ralph
00e4cfb1-43a6-4702-acd1-e6f2643f7531
Tillin, Neale Anthony
da771b23-7207-400b-aa1d-4a07c82aaaab
Hall, Jamie
91333048-f97f-4225-9acb-5d891bed65c3
Clifford, Kelly-Anne
be53c1c9-6e3d-4ba1-b715-05e929fd601a
Tyler, Christopher James
9faa5e93-c463-482f-add9-92dea169d167

Gordon, Ralph, Tillin, Neale Anthony, Hall, Jamie, Clifford, Kelly-Anne and Tyler, Christopher James (2015) The effect of hyperthermia with localised head and neck cooling on neuromuscular function. 16th International Conference on Environmental Ergonomics, , Portsmouth, United Kingdom. 28 Jun - 03 Jul 2015. 1 pp .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Other)

Abstract

Introduction: hyperthermia reduces volitional force production, voluntary muscle activation and agonist-electromyography (EMG) during a sustained maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) [1], [2]. This reduction in neuromuscular function may explain a reduced exercise capacity in the heat. Cooling of the neck has been shown to improve running capacity in the heat [3]; however the mechanism is unknown. The aim of the study was to investigate whether localised cooling of the head and neck during hyperthermia would affect neuromuscular function following 60 min of cycling in the heat.

Methods: fourteen male participants exercised on a cycle ergometer for 60 min at 50% ̇V̇O2max in three experimental conditions; hot (35 °C, 50% rh; HOT), hot with head and neck cooling (35 °C, 50% rh; HOTcooling) and control (18 °C, 50% rh; CON). Immediately after the cycling bout, participants performed a 120-s sustained isometric MVC of the knee extensors of their dominant limb. Neuromuscular activation was assessed during the MVC at 5, 30, 90 and 120-s by superimposing supra-maximal triplet (3 impulses at 100 Hz) contractions by electrical stimulation of the femoral nerve, and calculating the central activation ratio (CAR). EMG amplitude (normalised to maximal M-wave) of the 3 superficial quadriceps heads was recorded throughout the MVC. Rectal temperature (Tre) was measured throughout each condition.

Results: Tre was raised in both the HOT (39.27 (0.52) °C) and HOTcooling (39.19 (0.56) °C) trials vs CON (38.07 (0.28) °C) immediately post cycling (P <0.001) and remained elevated during the 120-s MVC. Force declined throughout the MVC in all conditions (Fig 1). The decline in force was on average 18 and 13.6% greater in HOT and HOTcooling respectively compared to CON (Fig.1; P <0.001 for both). This was similar for voluntary activation, with significant reductions in HOT vs CON trials across all time points (P <0.001). Normalised agonist EMG showed significant differences between HOT vs CON throughout the first 60-s of contraction; thereafter a reduced neural drive in all conditions was similar.

Discussion: cooling had no physiological effect on Tre during hyperthermia trials. HOT appeared to show the greatest decline in voluntary force and was associated with a greater decline in CAR and normalised EMG in comparison to CON. The higher force output for HOTcooling may be explained by improved neural drive of the central nervous system to voluntarily activated muscles.

Conclusion: localised head and neck cooling improves neuromuscular function of the knee extensors during a sustained MVC under hyperthermic conditions.

Text
Gordon - Reviewed_Final - Author's Original
Download (89kB)

More information

Published date: 28 June 2015
Venue - Dates: 16th International Conference on Environmental Ergonomics, , Portsmouth, United Kingdom, 2015-06-28 - 2015-07-03

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502754
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502754
PURE UUID: 317b757c-c3a2-4e7c-99a0-e5bca2287de1
ORCID for Ralph Gordon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8441-9292

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 08 Jul 2025 16:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:40

Export record

Contributors

Author: Ralph Gordon ORCID iD
Author: Neale Anthony Tillin
Author: Jamie Hall
Author: Kelly-Anne Clifford
Author: Christopher James Tyler

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×