Publications by authors named "Nathalie V Kirby"

Purpose: Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a neuroprotective growth factor that increases in young adults during short, intense bouts of passive heat stress. However, this may not reflect the response in heat-vulnerable populations exposed to air temperatures more consistent with indoor overheating during hot weather and heatwaves, especially as the BDNF response to acute stressors may diminish with increasing age. We therefore evaluated the ambient and body temperature-dependent responses of BDNF in older adults during daylong passive heating.

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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.

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Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is associated with reduced whole body sweating during exercise-heat stress. However, it is unclear if this impairment is related to exercise intensity and whether it occurs uniformly across body regions. We evaluated whole body (direct calorimetry) and local (ventilated-capsule technique; chest, back, forearm, thigh) sweat rates in physically active men with type 2 diabetes [T2D; aged 59 (7) yr; V̇o 32.

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Health agencies worldwide have historically cautioned that electric fans accelerate body-heat gain during hot weather and heatwaves (typically in air temperatures ≥35°C). However, guidance published since 2021 has suggested that fans can still cool the body in air temperatures up to 40°C by facilitating sweat evaporation, and therefore are an inexpensive yet sustainable alternative to air conditioning. In a critical analysis of the reports cited to support this claim, we found that although fan use improves sweat evaporation, these benefits are of insufficient magnitude to exert meaningful reductions in body core temperature in air temperatures exceeding 35°C.

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To protect vulnerable populations during heat waves, public health agencies recommend maintaining indoor air temperature below ∼24-28 °C. While we recently demonstrated that maintaining indoor temperatures ≤26 °C mitigates the development of hyperthermia and cardiovascular strain in older adults, the cellular consequences of prolonged indoor heat stress are poorly understood. We therefore evaluated the cellular stress response in 16 adults (six females) aged 66-78 years during 8 h rest in ambient conditions simulating homes maintained at 22 °C (control) and 26 °C (indoor temperature upper limit proposed by health agencies), as well as non-air-conditioned domiciles during hot weather and heat waves (31 and 36 °C, respectively; all 45% relative humidity).

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Synthetic progestins in oral contraceptives are thought to blunt heat dissipation by reducing skin blood flow and sweating. However, whether progestin-releasing intrauterine devices (IUDs) modulate heat loss during exercise-heat stress is unknown. We used direct calorimetry to measure whole-body total (dry + evaporative) heat loss in young, physically active women (mean (SD); aged 24 (4) years, 39.

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Background: Health agencies recommend that homes of heat-vulnerable occupants (e.g., older adults) be maintained below 24-28°C to prevent heat-related mortality and morbidity.

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The cutaneous vasculature is an accessible tissue that can be used to assess microvascular function in humans. Intradermal microdialysis is a minimally invasive technique used to investigate mechanisms of vascular smooth muscle and endothelial function in the cutaneous circulation. This technique allows for the pharmacological dissection of the pathophysiology of microvascular endothelial dysfunction as indexed by decreased nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation, an indicator of cardiovascular disease development risk.

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New Findings: What is the central question of this study? Is the impairment in heat dissipation during exercise observed in men with type 2 diabetes related to glycaemic control (indexed by glycated haemoglobin; haemoglobin A )? What is the main finding and its importance? No association was found between haemoglobin A (range: 5.1-9.1%) and whole-body heat loss in men with type 2 diabetes during exercise in the heat.

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Background: The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of sex on the efficacy of intermittent post-exercise sauna bathing to induce heat acclimation and improve markers of temperate exercise performance in trained athletes.

Methods: Twenty-six trained runners (16 female; mean ± SD, age 19 ± 1 years, V̇O F: 52.6 ± 6.

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Purpose: This study investigated whether intermittent post-exercise sauna bathing across three-weeks endurance training improves exercise heat tolerance and exercise performance markers in temperate conditions, compared to endurance training alone. The subsidiary aim was to determine whether exercise-heat tolerance would further improve following 7-Weeks post-exercise sauna bathing.

Methods: Twenty middle-distance runners (13 female; mean ± SD, age 20 ± 2 years, [Formula: see text]O 56.

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Although emerging as a cost and time efficient way to prepare for competition in the heat, recent evidence indicates that "short-term" heat acclimation (<7 days) may not be sufficient for females to adapt to repeated heat stress. Furthermore, self-paced performance following either short-term, or longer (>7 days) heat acclimation has not been examined in a female cohort. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate self-paced endurance performance in hot conditions following 4- and 9-days of a high-intensity isothermic heat acclimation protocol in a female cohort.

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