4.6 Review

HUMAN TEMPERATURE REGULATION UNDER HEAT STRESS IN HEALTH, DISEASE, AND INJURY

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 102, Issue 4, Pages 1907-1989

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00047.2021

Keywords

core temperature; environment; exercise; skin blood flow; sweating; vasodilation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM068865, R56AG069005, R01AG096005, R01HL061388]
  2. Department of Defense [W81XWH- 15-1-0647]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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This review focuses on the regulation of deep body temperature in healthy and disordered human bodies during heat stress. Factors such as morphology, intrinsic factors, diseases, and injuries can independently or interactively affect deep body temperature regulation. Understanding the mechanisms behind these factors can provide insights into the impact of heat stress on the human body.
The human body constantly exchanges heat with the environment. Temperature regulation is a homeostatic feedback control system that ensures deep body temperature is maintained within narrow limits despite wide variations in environmental conditions and activity-related elevations in metabolic heat production. Extensive research has been performed to study the physiological regulation of deep body temperature. This review focuses on healthy and disordered human temperature regulation during heat stress. Central to this discussion is the notion that various morphological features, intrinsic factors, diseases, and injuries independently and inter-actively influence deep body temperature during exercise and/or exposure to hot ambient temperatures. The first sections review fundamental aspects of the human heat stress response, including the biophysical principles governing heat balance and the autonomic control of heat loss thermoeffectors. Next, we discuss the effects of different intrinsic factors (morphology, heat adaptation, biological sex, and age), diseases (neurological, cardiovascular, metabolic, and genetic), and injuries (spinal cord injury, deep burns, and heat stroke), with emphasis on the mechanisms by which these factors enhance or disturb the regulation of deep body temperature during heat stress. We conclude with key unanswered questions in this field of research.

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