Bach Aaron J E, Cunningham Sarah J K, Morris Norman R, Xu Zhiwei, Rutherford Shannon, Binnewies Sebastian, Meade Robert D
School of Medicine and Dentistry, Griffith University, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia.
Cities Research Institute, Griffith University, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia.
Temperature (Austin). 2024 Jan 2;11(1):4-26. doi: 10.1080/23328940.2023.2242062. Epub 2023 Aug 27.
The heat-related health burden is expected to persist and worsen in the coming years due to an aging global population and climate change. Defining the breadth and depth of our understanding of age-related changes in thermoregulation can identify underlying causes and strategies to protect vulnerable individuals from heat. We conducted the first systematic quantitative literature review to provide context to the historical experimental research of healthy older adults - compared to younger adults or unhealthy age matched cases - during exogenous heat strain, focusing on factors that influence thermoregulatory function (e.g. co-morbidities). We identified 4,455 articles, with 147 meeting eligibility criteria. Most studies were conducted in the US (39%), Canada (29%), or Japan (12%), with 71% of the 3,411 participants being male. About 71% of the studies compared younger and older adults, while 34% compared two groups of older adults with and without factors influencing thermoregulation. Key factors included age combined with another factor (23%), underlying biological mechanisms (18%), age independently (15%), influencing health conditions (15%), adaptation potential (12%), environmental conditions (9%), and therapeutic/pharmacological interventions (7%). Our results suggest that controlled experimental research should focus on the age-related changes in thermoregulation in the very old, females, those with overlooked chronic heat-sensitive health conditions (e.g. pulmonary, renal, mental disorders), the impact of multimorbidity, prolonged and cumulative effects of extreme heat, evidence-based policy of control measures (e.g. personal cooling strategies), pharmaceutical interactions, and interventions stimulating protective physiological adaptation. These controlled studies will inform the directions and use of limited resources in ecologically valid fieldwork studies.
由于全球人口老龄化和气候变化,与热相关的健康负担预计在未来几年将持续存在并恶化。明确我们对体温调节中与年龄相关变化的理解广度和深度,可以确定潜在原因以及保护易受影响个体免受高温侵害的策略。我们进行了首次系统性定量文献综述,以便为健康老年人(与年轻人或年龄匹配的不健康病例相比)在外源性热应激期间的历史实验研究提供背景信息,重点关注影响体温调节功能的因素(如合并症)。我们共识别出4455篇文章,其中147篇符合纳入标准。大多数研究在美国(39%)、加拿大(29%)或日本(12%)进行,在3411名参与者中,71%为男性。约71%的研究比较了年轻人和老年人,而34%的研究比较了两组有或没有影响体温调节因素的老年人。关键因素包括年龄与另一个因素相结合(23%)、潜在生物学机制(18%)、单独的年龄(15%)、影响健康状况(15%)、适应潜力(12%)、环境条件(9%)以及治疗/药物干预(7%)。我们的研究结果表明,对照实验研究应关注高龄老人、女性、患有被忽视的慢性热敏感健康状况(如肺部、肾脏、精神障碍)者的体温调节与年龄相关的变化、多重疾病的影响、极端高温的长期和累积影响、基于证据的控制措施政策(如个人降温策略)、药物相互作用以及刺激保护性生理适应的干预措施。这些对照研究将为生态有效实地研究中有限资源的使用方向提供参考。