Whole body heat loss is reduced in older males during short bouts of intermittent exercise

Author:

Larose Joanie1,Wright Heather E.1,Stapleton Jill1,Sigal Ronald J.23,Boulay Pierre4,Hardcastle Stephen5,Kenny Glen P.1

Affiliation:

1. Human and Environmental Physiology Research Unit, School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;

2. Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Health Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;

3. Faculties of Medicine and Kinesiology, The University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;

4. Faculty of Physical Education and Sports, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada; and

5. CanmetMINING, Natural Resources Canada, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Studies in young adults show that a greater proportion of heat is gained shortly following the start of exercise and that temporal changes in whole body heat loss during intermittent exercise have a pronounced effect on body heat storage. The consequences of short-duration intermittent exercise on heat storage with aging are unclear. We compared evaporative heat loss (H E) and changes in body heat content (ΔHb) between young (20–30 yr), middle-aged (40–45 yr), and older males (60–70 yr) of similar body mass and surface area, during successive exercise (4 × 15 min) and recovery periods (4 × 15 min) at a fixed rate of heat production (400 W) and under fixed environmental conditions (35°C/20% relative humidity). H E was lower in older males vs. young males during each exercise (Ex1: 283 ± 10 vs. 332 ± 11 kJ, Ex2: 334 ± 10 vs. 379 ± 5 kJ, Ex3: 347 ± 11 vs. 392 ± 5 kJ, and Ex4: 347 ± 10 vs. 387 ± 5 kJ, all P < 0.02), whereas H E in middle-aged males was intermediate to that measured in young and older adults (Ex1: 314 ± 13, Ex2: 355 ± 13, Ex3: 371 ± 13, and Ex4: 365 ± 8 kJ). H E was not significantly different between groups during the recovery periods. The net effect over 2 h was a greater ΔHb in older (267 ± 33 kJ; P = 0.016) and middle-aged adults (245 ± 16 kJ; P = 0.073) relative to younger counterparts (164 ± 20 kJ). As a result of a reduced capacity to dissipate heat during exercise, which was not compensated by a sufficiently greater rate of heat loss during recovery, both older and middle-aged males had a progressively greater rate of heat storage compared with young males over 2 h of intermittent exercise.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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