Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida.
Thermal and Mountain Medicine Division, U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine (USAIREM) , Natick, Massachusetts.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2018 Sep 1;125(3):841-849. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00220.2018. Epub 2018 Jun 14.
With increasing participation of females in endurance athletics and active military service, it is important to determine if there are inherent sex-dependent susceptibilities to exertional heat injury or heat stroke. In this study we compared responses of male and female adult mice to exertional heat stroke (EHS). All mice were instrumented for telemetry core temperature measurements and were exercise-trained for 3 wk before EHS. During EHS, environmental temperature was 37.5°C (35% RH) while the mice ran on a forced running wheel, using incremental increases in speed. The symptom-limited endpoint was loss of consciousness, occurring at ~42.2°C core temperature. Females ran greater distances (623 vs. 346 m, P < 0.0001), reached faster running speeds (7.2 vs. 5.1 m/min, P < 0.0001), exercised for longer times (177 vs. 124 min, P < 0.0001), and were exposed to greater internal heat loads (240 vs.160°C·min; P < 0.0001). Minimum Tc during hypothermic recovery was ~32.0°C in both sexes. Females lost 9.2% body weight vs. 7.5% in males ( P < 0.001). Females demonstrated higher circulating corticosterone (286 vs 183 ng/ml, P = 0.001, at 3 h), but most plasma cytokines were not different. A component of performance in females could be attributed to greater body surface area/mass and greater external power performance. However, there were significant and independent effects of sex alone and a crossed effect of "sex × power" on performance. These results demonstrate that female mice have greater resistance to EHS during exercise in hyperthermia and that these effects cannot be attributed solely to body size. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Female mice are surprisingly more resistant to exertional heat stroke than male mice. They run faster and longer and can withstand greater internal heat loads. These changes cannot be fully accounted for by increased body surface/mass ratio in females or on differences in aerobic performance. Although the stress-immune response in males and females was similar, females exhibited markedly higher plasma corticosteroid levels, which were sustained over 14 days of recovery.
随着女性越来越多地参与耐力运动和现役军事行动,确定是否存在与性别相关的易发性来判断是否存在运动性热损伤或热射病至关重要。在这项研究中,我们比较了雄性和雌性成年小鼠对运动性热射病(EHS)的反应。所有小鼠都接受了遥测核心体温测量的仪器化,并在 EHS 前进行了 3 周的运动训练。在 EHS 期间,环境温度为 37.5°C(35%RH),而小鼠在强制运行轮上运行,速度逐渐增加。症状限制终点是意识丧失,发生在约 42.2°C 的核心体温。雌性跑的距离更远(623 与 346 m,P < 0.0001),达到的跑步速度更快(7.2 与 5.1 m/min,P < 0.0001),运动时间更长(177 与 124 min,P < 0.0001),并且暴露于更大的内部热负荷(240 与 160°C·min;P < 0.0001)。在低温恢复期间,最低 Tc 在两性中均约为 32.0°C。雌性体重损失 9.2%,而雄性体重损失 7.5%(P < 0.001)。雌性的循环皮质酮水平更高(3 小时时为 286 与 183 ng/ml,P = 0.001),但大多数血浆细胞因子没有差异。女性表现出的部分性能可以归因于更大的体表面积/质量和更大的外部动力性能。然而,性别单独的影响以及“性别×功率”的交叉效应对性能有显著且独立的影响。这些结果表明,在高温下运动时,雌性小鼠对 EHS 的抵抗力明显强于雄性小鼠。它们跑得更快、更长,能够承受更大的内部热负荷。这些变化不能完全归因于雌性的体表面积/质量比增加或有氧性能的差异。尽管雄性和雌性的应激免疫反应相似,但雌性表现出明显更高的血浆皮质类固醇水平,这些水平在 14 天的恢复期间持续存在。