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1.
Wilderness Environ Med ; 11(3): 204-8, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11055570

ABSTRACT

Three groups of five men each were dehydrated overnight in the heat (115 degrees F) on two occasions (D1 and D2) to approximately 5.5% of their starting body weight. During the 3-week period between D1 and D2, one group (AC) was acclimatized to heat and physically conditioned, the second group (C) was physically conditioned and the third group (S) remained sedentary. The response to work after dehydration was assessed by the following criteria: pulse rate (P), rectal temperature (Tr) and maximal oxygen intake (Max. VO2). Pulse rates during and after walking and after running were elevated with dehydration. This elevation was reduced in groups AC and C at D2 as compared to D1, but not in group S. An elevation in T1 with walking also occurred with dehydration, but this elevation was not significantly different at D2 as compared with D1 in any group. Physical conditioning elicited an elevation in Max. VO2 (group AC and C), but the elevation was no greater in group AC than in group C. Dehydration was associated with an equal decrement in Max. VO2 at D1 and D2 in all groups, but the conditioned men (AC and C) maintained a relatively higher Max. VO2 than group S. Thus, physical conditioning was associated with enhanced work performance during dehydration (assessed by the above criteria), whereas acclimatization to heat did not appreciably supplement this effect.


Subject(s)
Acclimatization , Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Dehydration/history , Exercise/physiology , Hot Temperature , Body Temperature , Dehydration/physiopathology , History, 20th Century , Hot Temperature/adverse effects , Humans , Male , Running/history , Running/physiology
2.
Aviat Space Environ Med ; 46(5): 709-12, 1975 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1131135

ABSTRACT

Serial changes in serum magnesium (Mg2+) were assessed in unacclimatized males during treadmill exercise in a hot (49 degrees/27 degrees C, dry/wet bulb) environment. Eight subjects walked at 5.6 km/h on a 0% grade, and at 90 min of exercise had a mean heart rate of increase of 70 plus or minus 5 (S.E.) beats/min, rise in rectal temperature of 2.1 degrees plus or minus 0.1 degrees C, and a weight loss of 2.07 plus or minus 0.10 kg. There was a significant (p less than 0.01) decrease in mean serum Mg2+ concentration (control: 1.87 plus or minus 0.06 mEq/I; 45 min: 1.81 plus or minus 0.07; 90 min: 1.72 plus or minus 0.08). The Mg2+ concentration in sweat samples collected over 90 min of work in the heat averaged 0.28 mEq/I (range 0.13 to 0.45). Thus, in normal man, exercise in an hot, dry environment resulted in a fall in serum magnesium which was not wholly explicable on the basis of sweat loss of this ion.


Subject(s)
Hot Temperature , Magnesium/metabolism , Physical Exertion , Adolescent , Adult , Body Temperature , Body Weight , Chlorides/blood , Environment, Controlled , Exercise Test , Heart Rate , Humans , Magnesium/blood , Male , Photometry , Potassium/blood , Sodium/blood , Spectrophotometry, Atomic , Sweat/analysis , Time Factors
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