| Literature DB >> 29409650 |
Devin B Phillips1, Cameron M Ehnes2, Bradley G Welch2, Lauren N Lee2, Irina Simin2, Stewart R Petersen2.
Abstract
This study investigated physiological responses and performance during three separate exercise challenges (Parts I, II, and III) with wildland firefighting work clothing ensemble (boots and coveralls) and a 20.4 kg backpack in four conditions: U-EX (no pack, exercise clothing); L-EX (pack, exercise clothing); U-W (no pack, work clothing); and, L-W (pack and work clothing). Part I consisted of randomly-ordered graded exercise tests, on separate days, in U-EX, L-EX and L-W conditions. Part II consisted of randomly-ordered bouts of sub-maximal treadmill exercise in the four conditions. In Part III, subjects completed, in random-order on separate days, 4.83 km Pack Tests in L-EX or L-W conditions. In Part I, peak oxygen uptake was reduced (p < .05) in L-W. In Part II, mass-specific oxygen uptake was significantly higher in both work clothing conditions. In Part III, Pack Test time was slower (p < .05) in L-W. These results demonstrate the negative impact of work clothing and load carriage on physiological responses to exercise and performance.Entities:
Keywords: Load carriage; Oxygen demand; Performance; Protective clothing; Wildland Firefighter Pack Test
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29409650 DOI: 10.1016/j.apergo.2017.12.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Ergon ISSN: 0003-6870 Impact factor: 3.661