| Literature DB >> 28878888 |
John W Castellani1, Marissa G Spitz1, Anthony J Karis1, Svein Martini2, Andrew J Young1, Lee M Margolis1, J Phillip Karl1, Nancy E Murphy1, Xiaojiang Xu1, Scott J Montain1, Jamie A Bohn1, Hilde K Teien2, Pål H Stenberg3, Yngvar Gundersen2, Stefan M Pasiakos1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular (CV) and thermal responses to metabolically demanding multi-day military operations in extreme cold-weather environments are not well described. Characterization of these operations will provide greater insights into possible performance capabilities and cold injury risk.Entities:
Keywords: Deep body temperature; Finger temperature; Heart rate; IREQ; Thermal modeling
Year: 2017 PMID: 28878888 PMCID: PMC5586032 DOI: 10.1186/s13728-017-0056-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extrem Physiol Med ISSN: 2046-7648
Energy expenditure, intake, and balance during study iterations #1 and #2
| Energy expenditure | Energy intake | Energy balance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 ( | 6821 ± 578 | 3465 ± 622 | −3357 ± 691 |
| Study 2 ( | 6394 ± 544 | 2714 ± 799 | −3782 ± 1001 |
Values (mean ± S.D.) are in kcals and MJ (parenthetically)
Fig. 1Heart rate (HR) and pill temperature (T pill) vs. time during 3-day Arctic ski march (study 1). Data are mean ± S.D. (HR: n = 18; T pill: n = 10)
Fig. 2Heart rate and pill temperature vs. time during 4-day Arctic ski march (study 2, n = 10). Data are mean ± S.D
Fig. 3Finger (T finger) and toe (T toe) temperatures vs. time during 4-day Arctic ski march (study 2). Data are mean ± S.D. (T finger: n = 9; T toe: n = 10)
Fig. 4Observed (mean ± S.D.) and predicted change in pill (a), chest (b), and calf (c) temperatures vs. time during 10-h ski march in −6.1 °C air temperature. Predicted values were calculated using the 6-CTM thermoregulatory model
Standard deviations and root mean square deviations (RMSD) for 3 temperature sites during 10-h ski march (hours 41–51) in Study 2
| Measurement | No. of volunteers | Standard deviation | RMSD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pill (Core) | 10 | 0.45 | 0.59 |
| Chest (Torso) | 8 | 1.67 | 1.34 |
| Calf (Leg) | 4 | 1.70 | 1.89 |
Sites in parentheses denote site for model prediction
Fig. 5Bland-Altman plots for the change in change in pill (a), chest (b), and calf (c) temperatures using the 6-CTM thermoregulatory model. Lines shown are the qualitative thresholds (±0.4 °C for pill temperature; ±1.0 °C for skin temperatures) for prediction agreement