European journal of applied physiology
-
Eur. J. Appl. Physiol. · Sep 2012
Randomized Controlled TrialEffects of 29-h total sleep deprivation on local cold tolerance in humans.
To study the effects of a 29-h total sleep deprivation (TSD) on local cold tolerance, 10 healthy men immersed their right hand for 30 min in a 5°C water bath (CWI) after a 30-min rest period in a thermoneutral environment (Control), after a normal night (NN) and after a 29-h TSD. CWI was followed by a 30-min passive rewarming (Recovery). Finger 2 and 4 skin temperatures (Tfi2, Tfi4) and finger 2 cutaneous vascular conductance (CVC) were monitored to study cold-induced vasodilation (CIVD). ⋯ After TSD at Control and CWI, plasma endothelin levels were higher and negatively correlated with Tfi2, Tfi4 and CVC. However, no effect of TSD was found on the number and amplitude of CIVD and in Tre, HR, BP and catecholamines, for all periods. We concluded that TSD induced thermal and vascular changes in the hand which impair the local cold tolerance, suggesting that TSD increases the risk of local cold injuries.
-
Eur. J. Appl. Physiol. · Sep 2012
Clinical TrialCharacterizing the profile of muscle deoxygenation during ramp incremental exercise in young men.
This study characterized the profile of near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)-derived muscle deoxygenation (Δ[HHb]) and the tissue oxygenation index (TOI) as a function of absolute (PO(ABS)) and normalized power output (%PO) or oxygen consumption (%VO(2)) during incremental cycling exercise. Eight men (24 ± 5 year) each performed two fatigue-limited ramp incremental cycling tests (20 W min(-1)), during which pulmonary VO(2), Δ[HHb] and TOI were measured continuously. Responses from the two tests were averaged and the TOI (%) and normalized Δ[HHb] (%Δ[HHb]) were plotted against %VO(2), %PO and PO(ABS). ⋯ In ~85% of cases, the corrected Akaike Information Criterion (AIC(C)) was smaller (suggesting one model favoured) for the 'double-linear' compared with the sigmoid regression for both %Δ[HHb] and TOI. Furthermore, the f ( 0 ) and A estimates from the sigmoid regressions of %Δ[HHb] yielded unrealistically large projected peak (f ( 0 ) + A) values (%VO(2p) 114.3 ± 17.5; %PO 113.3 ± 9.5; PO(ABS) 113.5 ± 9.8), suggesting that the sigmoid model does not accurately describe the underlying physiological responses in all subjects and thus may not be appropriate for comparative purposes. Alternatively, the present study proposes that the profile of %Δ[HHb] and TOI during ramp incremental exercise may be more accurately described as consisting of three distinct phases in which there is little adjustment early in the ramp, the predominant increase in %Δ[HHb] (decrease in TOI) is approximately linear and an approximately linear 'plateau' follows.