Haman François
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1N 6N5.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2006 May;100(5):1702-8. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.01088.2005.
In cold-exposed adult humans, significant or lethal decreases in body temperature are delayed by reducing heat loss via peripheral vasoconstriction and by increasing rates of heat production via shivering thermogenesis. This brief review focuses on the mechanisms of fuel selection responsible for sustaining long-term shivering thermogenesis. It provides evidence to explain large discrepancies in fuel selection measurements among shivering studies, and it proposes links between choices in fuel selection mechanism and human survival in the cold. Over the last decades, a number of studies have quantified the contributions of carbohydrate (CHO) and lipid to total heat generation. However, the exact contributions of these fuels still remain unclear because of large differences in fuel selection measurements even at the same metabolic rate. Recent advances on the mechanisms of fuel selection during shivering provide some plausible explanations for these discrepancies between shivering studies. This new evidence indicates that muscles can sustain shivering over several hours using a variety of fuel mixtures achieved by modifying diet (changing the size of CHO reserves) or by changing muscle fiber recruitment (increasing or decreasing the recruitment of type II fibers). From a practical perspective, how does the choice of fuel selection mechanism affect human survival in the cold? Based on a glycogen-depletion model, estimates of shivering endurance show that, whereas the oxidation of widely different fuel mixtures does not improve survival time, the selective recruitment of fuel-specific muscle fibers provides a substantial advantage for cold survival. By combining fundamental research on fuel metabolism and applied strategies to improve shivering endurance, future research in this area promises to yield important new information on what limits human survival in the cold.
在暴露于寒冷环境的成年人体内,通过外周血管收缩减少热量散失以及通过寒战产热增加产热速率,可延缓体温显著下降或致死性下降。本简要综述聚焦于负责维持长期寒战产热的燃料选择机制。它提供了证据来解释寒战研究中燃料选择测量结果的巨大差异,并提出了燃料选择机制的选择与人类在寒冷环境中的生存之间的联系。在过去几十年中,许多研究已经量化了碳水化合物(CHO)和脂质对总产热的贡献。然而,由于即使在相同代谢率下燃料选择测量结果仍存在很大差异,这些燃料的确切贡献仍不清楚。寒战期间燃料选择机制的最新进展为这些寒战研究之间的差异提供了一些合理的解释。这一新证据表明,肌肉可以通过改变饮食(改变CHO储备量)或改变肌肉纤维募集(增加或减少II型纤维的募集)来使用多种燃料混合物维持数小时的寒战。从实际角度来看,燃料选择机制的选择如何影响人类在寒冷环境中的生存?基于糖原耗竭模型,寒战耐力的估计表明,虽然广泛不同的燃料混合物的氧化并不能提高生存时间,但选择性募集特定燃料的肌肉纤维为寒冷生存提供了实质性优势。通过将燃料代谢的基础研究与提高寒战耐力的应用策略相结合,该领域的未来研究有望产生关于限制人类在寒冷环境中生存的因素的重要新信息。