Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine, Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center , Dallas, Texas.
Thermal Ergonomics Laboratory, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW , Australia.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2019 Feb 1;126(2):267-277. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00191.2018. Epub 2018 Nov 29.
For thermal physiologists, calorimetry is an important methodological tool to assess human heat balance during heat or cold exposures. A whole body direct calorimeter remains the gold standard instrument for assessing human heat balance; however, this equipment is rarely available to most researchers. A more widely accessible substitute is partitional calorimetry, a method by which all components of the conceptual heat balance equation-metabolic heat production, conduction, radiation, convection, and evaporation-are calculated separately based on fundamental properties of energy exchange. Since partitional calorimetry requires relatively inexpensive equipment (vs. direct calorimetry) and can be used over a wider range of experimental conditions (i.e., different physical activities, laboratory or field settings, clothed or seminude), it allows investigators to address a wide range of problems such as predicting human responses to thermal stress, developing climatic exposure limits and fluid replacement guidelines, estimating clothing properties, evaluating cooling/warming interventions, and identifying potential thermoregulatory dysfunction in unique populations. In this Cores of Reproducibility in Physiology (CORP) review, we summarize the fundamental principles underlying the use of partitional calorimetry, present the various methodological and arithmetic requirements, and provide typical examples of its use. Strategies to minimize estimation error of specific heat balance components, as well as the limitations of the method, are also discussed. The goal of this CORP paper is to present a standardized methodology and thus improve the accuracy and reproducibility of research employing partitional calorimetry.
对于热生理学家来说,量热法是评估人体在热或冷暴露期间热量平衡的重要方法学工具。全身直接量热仪仍然是评估人体热量平衡的金标准仪器;然而,大多数研究人员很少有机会使用这种设备。一种更广泛使用的替代方法是分区量热法,该方法根据能量交换的基本特性,分别计算热量平衡方程的所有组成部分——代谢产热、传导、辐射、对流和蒸发。由于分区量热法需要相对便宜的设备(与直接量热法相比),并且可以在更广泛的实验条件下使用(即不同的身体活动、实验室或现场设置、穿衣或半裸体),因此它允许研究人员解决广泛的问题,例如预测人体对热应激的反应、制定气候暴露极限和补液指南、估计服装性能、评估冷却/加热干预措施以及识别特殊人群中潜在的体温调节功能障碍。在本次生理学可重复性核心(CORP)综述中,我们总结了分区量热法使用的基本原理,介绍了各种方法学和算法要求,并提供了其使用的典型示例。还讨论了最小化特定热量平衡成分估计误差的策略以及该方法的局限性。本文的目的是提出一种标准化的方法,从而提高使用分区量热法的研究的准确性和可重复性。