4 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
The objective of this study was to examine the impact of four single-bout heating and cooling strategies on warming up and cooling down core body temperature. Heating strategies included: Passive heating in a hot environment (60 min), Active heating (30 min) + passive heating (30 min) in a hot environment, Active heating(60 min) in a hot environment, and Active heating (60 min) at room temperature. Cooling strategies to reduce body core temperature to baseline included: Cool vest (18°C) , Damp neck towel (24°C) combined with arm (i.e. hand, forearm and half of upper arm) cool water immersion (15°C), Combination of both, A control with participant sitting in a thermoneutral room (20°C air temperature) without any additional cooling intervention.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether tart cherry supplementation effects thermotolerance and heat acclimation in human subjects exposed to exercise/heat stress. Specific Aim I. To determine if tart cherry in combination with repeated bouts of thermally stressful exercise will impact the gut microbiome \& inflammation measured via stool sample \& blood samples for plasma endotoxin, inflammatory cytokines and HSP. Specific Aim II. To determine whether whole body hyperthermia causes changes in bacterial populations in the gut microbiome, and if these changes are affected by washout or re-acclimation. Specific Aim III. To determine whether tart cherry supplementation suppresses the ability of human subjects to acclimate to exercise/heat stress. This will be assessed via body temperature, heart rate, sweat and plasma volume responses, and exercise performance during standardized heat tolerance tests.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether dietary quercetin supplementation effects thermotolerance and heat acclimation in human subjects exposed to exercise/heat stress. Specific Aim I. To determine if quercetin in combination with repeated bouts of thermally stressful exercise will impact intestinal barrier function. The investigators will examine urinary lactulose excretion, plasma endotoxin,plasma quercetin, inflammatory cytokines (TNF-a \& Il-6), anti-inflammatory cytokines (Il-10), and HSP70 and HSF-1 content of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Specific Aim II. To determine whether quercetin's suppresses the ability of human subjects to acclimate to exercise/heat stress. The investigators will examine body temperatures, heart rates, physiological strain, sweat and plasma volume responses to standardized heat tolerance tests.
The investigators aim to test the effectiveness of two cooling interventions in reducing the core temperature of outdoor workers.