Richards Brodie J, O'Connor Fergus K, Koetje Nicholas J, Janetos Kristina-Marie T, McGarr Gregory W, Kenny Glen P
Human and Environmental Physiology Research Unit, School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Ind Med. 2025 Sep;68(9):817-825. doi: 10.1002/ajim.70002. Epub 2025 Jul 6.
Consuming cold beverages during work in the heat can reduce sweat output in males. However, responses in females may differ given sex-related differences in whole-body heat exchange during work in the heat. We therefore assessed whether sex influences whole-body heat exchange following cold beverage ingestion during intermittent work in hot conditions.
Twenty young adults (ten females, mean ± SD: 23 ± 3 years) performed four 15-min bouts of moderate-intensity cycling at a fixed rate of metabolic heat production (200 W·m), each interspersed by 15-min rest periods in dry heat (40°C, 12% relative humidity). On separate days, participants ingested either ice-slurry (0°C), standardized to provide a heat transfer capacity of 75 kJ·m, or an identical mass of warm fluid (37.5°C) prior to the first and third exercise bouts. Dry and evaporative heat exchange (direct calorimetry), as well as metabolic heat production (indirect calorimetry), were measured continuously and used to determine cumulative heat storage (summation of heat loss and heat gain) over the entire protocol.
Dry and evaporative heat exchange were unaffected by beverage condition or sex (all p > 0.05). Relative to warm fluid, ice-slurry ingestion reduced cumulative heat storage in females (86 ± 120 vs. 167 ± 103 kJ, p = 0.01) and males (69 ± 181 vs. 216 ± 94 kJ) but responses did not differ between sexes (p = 0.70).
Whole-body heat exchange was unaffected by beverage temperature, albeit the heat transfer to the ingested ice-slurry reduced cumulative heat storage in both sexes during intermittent work in dry heat.
在炎热环境中工作时饮用冷饮可减少男性的出汗量。然而,由于在炎热环境中工作时全身热交换存在性别差异,女性的反应可能有所不同。因此,我们评估了在炎热条件下进行间歇性工作期间饮用冷饮后性别是否会影响全身热交换。
20名年轻成年人(10名女性,平均±标准差:23±3岁)以固定的代谢产热率(200W·m)进行4次15分钟的中等强度骑行,每次骑行之间穿插15分钟的干热休息时间(40°C,相对湿度约12%)。在不同的日子里,参与者在第一次和第三次运动回合前分别饮用了标准化为提供75kJ·m传热能力的冰浆(约0°C)或相同质量的温流体(37.5°C)。连续测量干热交换和蒸发热交换(直接量热法)以及代谢产热(间接量热法),并用于确定整个实验方案中的累积蓄热(热损失和热增益的总和)。
干热交换和蒸发热交换不受饮料条件或性别的影响(所有p>0.05)。相对于温流体,饮用冰浆可减少女性(86±120 vs.167±103kJ,p=0.01)和男性(69±181 vs.216±94kJ)的累积蓄热,但两性之间的反应没有差异(p=0.70)。
全身热交换不受饮料温度的影响,尽管在干热环境中间歇性工作期间,摄入冰浆的热传递减少了两性的累积蓄热。