Human and Environmental Physiology Research Unit, School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Departments of Medicine, Cardiac Sciences and Community Health Sciences, Faculties of Medicine and Kinesiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2024 Sep 1;49(9):1252-1270. doi: 10.1139/apnm-2024-0135. Epub 2024 Jun 3.
Older adults are at elevated risk of heat-related mortality due to age-associated declines in thermoregulatory and cardiovascular function. However, the inter-individual factors that exacerbate physiological heat strain during heat exposure remain unclear, making it challenging to identify more heat-vulnerable subgroups. We therefore explored factors contributing to inter-individual variability in physiological responses of older adults exposed to simulated hot weather. Thirty-seven older adults (61-80 years, 16 females) rested for 8 h in 31 and 36 °C (45% relative humidity). Core (rectal) temperature, heart rate (HR), HR variability, mean arterial pressure (MAP), and cardiac autonomic responses to standing were measured at baseline and end-exposure. Bootstrapped least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression was used to evaluate whether variation in these responses was related to type 2 diabetes (T2D, = 10), hypertension ( = 18), age, sex, body morphology, habitual physical activity levels, and/or heat-acclimatization. T2D was identified as a predictor of end-exposure HR (with vs. without: 13 beats/min (bootstrap 95% confidence interval: 6, 23)), seated MAP (-7 mmHg (-18, 1)), and the systolic pressure response to standing (20 mmHg (4, 36)). HR was also influenced by sex (female vs. male: 8 beats/min (1, 16)). No other predictors were identified. The inter-individual factors explored did not meaningfully contribute to the variation in body temperature responses in older adults exposed to simulated indoor overheating. By contrast, cardiovascular responses were exacerbated in females and individuals with T2D. These findings improve understanding of how inter-individual differences contribute to heat-induced physiological strain in older persons.
老年人由于与年龄相关的体温调节和心血管功能下降,面临更高的与热相关的死亡风险。然而,在热暴露期间加剧生理热应激的个体间因素仍不清楚,因此难以确定更易受热影响的亚组。因此,我们探讨了导致暴露于模拟炎热天气下的老年人个体间生理反应差异的因素。37 名老年人(61-80 岁,16 名女性)在 31 和 36°C(45%相对湿度)下休息 8 小时。在基线和暴露结束时测量核心(直肠)温度、心率(HR)、HR 变异性、平均动脉压(MAP)以及心脏自主神经对站立的反应。使用自举最小绝对收缩和选择算子回归评估这些反应的变异性是否与 2 型糖尿病(T2D,=10)、高血压(=18)、年龄、性别、体型、习惯性体力活动水平以及/或热适应有关。T2D 被确定为暴露结束时 HR 的预测因子(有 vs. 无:13 次/分钟(自举 95%置信区间:6,23))、坐姿 MAP(-7mmHg(-18,1))和站立时的收缩压反应(20mmHg(4,36))。HR 还受性别影响(女性 vs. 男性:8 次/分钟(1,16))。未确定其他预测因子。在暴露于模拟室内过热的老年人中,所探索的个体间因素对体温反应的变异性没有显著贡献。相比之下,心血管反应在女性和 T2D 个体中加剧。这些发现有助于更好地了解个体间差异如何导致老年人的热诱导生理应激。