AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the effects of heat acclimation (HA) on immune and wellness indicators in recreational athletes during a controlled-hyperthermia protocol over 10 days.
  • It found that while physiological adaptations like improved sweating and lower body temperature were achieved, resting salivary immunoglobulin-A (s-IgA) and cortisol levels did not change significantly.
  • Ultimately, HA did not negatively impact upper-respiratory symptoms or overall wellness ratings, indicating it’s safe for athletes prior to peak events.

Article Abstract

Heat acclimation (HA) protocols repeatedly expose individuals to heat stress. As HA is typically performed close to the pinnacle event, it is essential that the protocol does not compromise immune status, health, or wellbeing. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of HA on resting salivary immunoglobulin-A (s-IgA) and salivary cortisol (s-cortisol), self-reported upper-respiratory tract symptoms, and self-reported wellness parameters. Seventeen participants (peak oxygen uptake 53.2 ± 9.0 mL·kg·min) completed a 10-day controlled-hyperthermia HA protocol, and a heat stress test both before (HST1) and after (HST2) HA (33°C, 65% relative humidity). Resting saliva samples were collected at HST1, day 3 and 7 of the HA protocol, HST2, and at 5 ± 1 days post-HA. Upper-respiratory tract symptom data were collected weekly from one week prior to HA until three weeks post HA, and wellness ratings were reported daily throughout HA. HA successfully induced physiological adaptations, with a lower end-exercise rectal temperature and heart rate and higher whole-body sweat rate at HST2 compared to HST1. In contrast, resting saliva flow rate, s-IgA concentration, s-cortisol concentration, and s-cortisol secretion rate remained unchanged (n = 11-14, P = 0.10-0.48). Resting s-IgA secretion rate increased by 39% from HST1 to HST2 (n = 14, P = 0.03). No changes were observed in self-reported upper respiratory tract symptoms and wellness ratings. In conclusion, controlled-hyperthermia HA did not negatively affect resting s-IgA and s-cortisol, self-reported upper-respiratory tract symptoms, and self-reported wellness parameters in recreational athletes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9629114PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23328940.2022.2088029DOI Listing

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