Abstract

Thermal sensation represents the primary stimulus for behavioral and autonomic thermoregulation. We assessed whether the sensation of skin and core temperatures for the driving force of behavioral thermoregulation was modified by postural change from the supine (Sup) to sitting (Sit) during mild hyperthermia. Seventeen healthy young men underwent measurements of noticeable increase and decrease (±0.1°C/s) of skin temperature (thresholds of warm and cold sensation on the skin, 6.25cm2 of area) at the forearm and chest and of the whole-body warm sensation in the Sup and Sit during normothermia (NT; esophageal temperature (Tes), ∼36.6°C) and mild hyperthermia (HT; Tes, ∼37.2°C; lower legs immersion in 42°C of water). The threshold for cold sensation on the skin at chest was lower during HT than NT in the Sit (P<0.05) but not in Sup, and at the forearm was lower during HT than NT in the Sup and further in Sit (both, P<0.05), with interactive effects of temperature (NT vs. HT)×posture (Sup vs. Sit) (chest, P=0.08; forearm, P<0.05). The threshold for warm sensation on the skin at both sites remained unchanged with changes in body posture or temperature. The whole-body warm sensation was higher during HT than NT in both postures and higher in the Sit than Sup during both NT and HT (all, P<0.05). Thus, thermal sensation during mild hyperthermia is modulated by postural change from supine to sitting to sense lesser cold on the skin and more whole-body warmth.

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