4.4 Article

The effect of hyperhydration on physiological and perceived strain during treadmill exercise in personal protective equipment

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 607-613

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-008-0940-2

Keywords

Thermoregulation; Personal protective equipment; Hydration; Perceptual strain; Physiologic strain

Funding

  1. Pittsburgh Emergency Medicine Foundation
  2. Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

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Work in personal protective equipment (PPE) impairs thermoregulation causing cardiovascular stress, increased core body temperature, and hypohydration. We examined the effect of pretreating first responders performing treadmill exercise in PPE with an infusion of normal saline on physiological and perceptual strain. Ten (eight males, two females) euhydrated subjects performed treadmill exercise on two occasions wearing a chemical resistant coverall, air purifying respirator, butyl gloves, and heavy boots. During the hyperhydration session, normal saline was rapidly infused through an arm vein prior to donning PPE. Exercise duration and maximum core temperature did not differ between euhydrated and hyperhydrated conditions. Perceptual strain index (PeSI) was higher than physiological strain index (PhSI) in the euhydrated condition (P = 0.002) but neither index differed between the control and experimental conditions. Intravenous hyperhydration did not reduce physiological stress, increase exercise, or influence perceptual strain time when compared to the euhydrated condition in moderately fit individuals.

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