Effects of motion sickness on thermoregulatory responses in a thermoneutral air environment

被引:0
|
作者
Gerard Nobel
Arne Tribukait
Igor B. Mekjavic
Ola Eiken
机构
[1] Royal Institute of Technology,Department of Environmental Physiology, School of Technology and Health
[2] Jozef Stefan Institute,Department of Automation Biocybernetics and Robotics
来源
European Journal of Applied Physiology | 2012年 / 112卷
关键词
Motion sickness; Behavioural thermoregulation; Vasomotor tone; Sweating;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Motion sickness (MS) has been identified as a non-thermal factor that can moderate autonomic thermoregulatory responses. It has been shown that MS exaggerates core cooling during immersion in cold (15°C) and luke-warm (28°C) water by attenuating cold-induced vasoconstriction. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether MS affects thermal balance in a thermoneutral air environment. Eleven subjects were exposed to rotation in two conditions, control (CN) and MS. In the CN condition subjects refrained from head movements, whereas in the MS condition they performed a sequence of maximal head movements (left, right, up, down) at 15-s intervals until they were very nauseous. Sweating rate, rectal temperature (Tre), the difference in temperature between the right forearm and tip of the second finger (Tff) as an index of cutaneous vasomotor tone, perceived MS, thermal comfort and temperature perception were recorded before and during rotation, and during 90-min post-rotation. During the post-rotation period, Tre dropped and sweating rate increased in the MS but not in the CN condition. The Tff response suggests that MS-induced peripheral vasodilatation which, together with the sweating resulted in increased heat loss. During rotation, subjects perceived temperature to be uncomfortably high, suggesting that MS may also affect thermoregulatory behaviour. It thus appears that also in a thermoneutral air environment MS may substantially affect thermal balance.
引用
收藏
页码:1717 / 1723
页数:6
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