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Revisiting Age Differences in the Region-Specific Sweat Rate Response During Whole-Body Passive Heating

Aging is associated with attenuated sweat gland function, which has been suggested to occur in a peripheral-to-central manner. However, evidence supporting this hypothesis remains equivocal. We therefore revisited this hypothesis by evaluating sweat rate across the limbs and trunk in young and older men during whole-body, passive heating. A water-perfused suit was used to raise and clamp esophageal temperature at 0.6°C (low-heat strain) and 1.2°C (moderate-heat strain) above baseline in 14 young (24 [SD 5] years) and 15 older (69 [4] years) men. Sweat rate was measured at multiple sites on the trunk (chest, abdomen) and limbs (biceps, forearm, quadriceps, calf) using ventilated capsules (3.8 cm²). Sweat rates, expressed as the average of 5 min of stable sweat rate at low- and moderate-heat strain, were compared between groups (young, older) and regions (trunk, limbs) within each level of heat strain using a linear mixed-effects model with nested intercepts (sites nested within region nested within participant). At low-heat strain, the age-related reduction in sweat rate (older-young values) was greater at the trunk (0.65 mg/cm²/min [95% CI 0.44, 0.86]) compared to the limbs (0.42 mg/cm²/min [0.22, 0.62]; interaction: p=0.010). At moderate-heat strain, sweat rate was lower in the older compared to young (main effect: p=0.025), albeit that reduction did not differ between regions (interaction: p=0.888). We conclude that, contrary to previous suggestions, the agerelated decline in sweat rate was greater at the trunk compared to the limbs at lowheat strain, with no evidence of regional variation in that age-related decline at moderate-heat strain.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/44056
Date14 September 2022
CreatorsSchmidt, Madison
ContributorsKenny, Glen
PublisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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