A case report on the physiological responses to extreme heat during Sicily's July 2023 heatwave

Author:

Filingeri Davide1ORCID,Valenza Alessandro2,Ficarra Salvatore2,Filingeri Victoria3,Worsley Peter R.4,Bianco Antonino2

Affiliation:

1. ThermosenseLab, Skin Sensing Research Group, School of Health Sciences The University of Southampton Southampton UK

2. Sport and Exercise Sciences Research Unit, Department of Psychology, Educational Science and Human Movement University of Palermo Palermo Italy

3. Psychological and Behavioural Sciences, School of Psychology, College of Health, Psychology and Social Care University of Derby Derby UK

4. PRESSURELAB, Skin Sensing Research Group, School of Health Sciences The University of Southampton Southampton UK

Abstract

AbstractJuly 2023 has been confirmed as Earth's hottest month on record, and it was characterized by extraordinary heatwaves across southern Europe. Field data collected under real heatwave periods could add important evidence to understand human adaptability to extreme heat. However, field studies on human physiological responses to heatwave periods remain limited. We performed field thermo‐physiological measurements in a healthy 37‐years male undergoing resting and physical activity in an outdoor environment in the capital of Sicily, Palermo, during (July 21; highest level of local heat‐health alert) and following (August 10; lowest level of local heat‐health alert) the peak of Sicily's July 2023 heatwave. Results indicated that ~40 min of outdoor walking and light running in 33.8°C Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) conditions (July 21) resulted in significant physiological stress (i.e., peak heart rate: 209 bpm; core temperature: 39.13°C; mean skin temperature: 37.2°C; whole‐body sweat losses: 1.7 kg). Importantly, significant physiological stress was also observed during less severe heat conditions (August 10; WBGT: 29.1°C; peak heart rate: 190 bpm; core temperature: 38.48°C; whole‐body sweat losses: 2 kg). These observations highlight the physiological strain that current heatwave conditions pose on healthy young individuals. This ecologically‐valid empirical evidence could inform more accurate heat‐health planning.

Funder

Università degli Studi di Palermo

Publisher

Wiley

Reference16 articles.

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