AI Article Synopsis

  • The first four studies from 1986 to 1997 highlighted how heat acclimation can protect rat hearts from damage due to reduced blood flow and recovery processes.
  • Research conducted in 1998 tested this concept in humans, comparing heart function between patients acclimatized to heat and those in colder environments during recovery from heart surgery.
  • Results indicated that heat-acclimated patients showed reduced heart dysfunction, marking a significant step in applying the benefits of environmental stressors to improve human cardiac recovery post-surgery.

Article Abstract

During the period of 1986-1997 the first 4 publications on the mechanical and metabolic properties of heat acclimated rat's heart were published. The outcome of these studies implied that heat acclimation, sedentary as well as combined with exercise training, confers long lasting protection against ischemic/reperfusion insult. These results promoted a clinical study on patients with coronary artery disease scheduled for elective coronary artery bypass operations aiming to elucidate whether exploitation of environmental stress can be translated into human benefits by improving physiological recovery. During the 1998 study, immediate-post operative chamber stiffness was assessed in patients acclimatized to heat and low intensity training in the desert (spring in the Dead Sea, 17-33°C) vs. patients in colder weather (spring in non-desert areas, 6-19°C) via echocardiogram acquisition simultaneous with left atrial pressure measurement during fast intravascular fluid bolus administration. We showed that patients undergoing "heat acclimatization combined with exercise training" were less susceptible to ischemic injury, therefore expressing less diastolic dysfunction after cardiopulmonary bypass compared to non-acclimatized patients. This was the first clinical translational study on cardiac patients, while exploiting environmental harsh conditions for human benefits. The original experimental data are described and discussed in view of the past as well as the present knowledge of the protective mechanisms induced by Heat Acclimation Mediated Cross-tolerance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5732210PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2017.01022DOI Listing

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