The sweat glands’ maximum ion reabsorption rates following heat acclimation in healthy older adults

Nicola Gerrett, Tatsuro Amano, Yoshimitsu Inoue, Narihiko Kondo*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

New Findings: What is the central question to this study? Do the sweat glands’ maximum ion reabsorption rates increase following heat acclimation in healthy older individuals and is this associated with elevated aldosterone concentrations? What is the main finding and its importance? Sweat gland maximum ion reabsorption rates improved heterogeneously across body sites, which occurred without any changes in aldosterone concentration following a controlled hyperthermic heat acclimation protocol in healthy older individuals. Abstract: We examined whether the eccrine sweat glands’ ion reabsorption rates improved following heat acclimation (HA) in older individuals. Ten healthy older adults (>65 years) completed a controlled hyperthermic (+0.9°C rectal temperature, Tre) HA protocol for nine non-consecutive days. Participants completed a passive heat stress test (lower leg 42°C water submersion) pre-HA and post-HA to assess physiological regulation of sweat gland ion reabsorption at the chest, forearm and thigh. The maximum ion reabsorption rate was defined as the inflection point in the slope of the relation between galvanic skin conductance and sweat rate (SR). We explored the responses again after a 7-day decay. During passive heating, the Tb thresholds for sweat onset on the chest and forearm were lowered after HA (P < 0.05). However, sweat sensitivity (i.e. the slope), the SR at a given Tre and gross sweat loss did not improve after HA (P > 0.05). Any changes observed were lost during the decay. Pilocarpine-induced sudomotor responses to iontophoresis did not change after HA (P ≥ 0.801). Maximum ion reabsorption rate was only enhanced at the chest (P = 0.001) despite unaltered aldosterone concentration after HA. The data suggest that this adaptation is lost after 7 days’ decay. The HA protocol employed in the present study induced partial adaptive sudomotor responses. Eccrine sweat gland ion reabsorption rates improved heterogeneously across the skin sites. It is likely that aldosterone secretion did not alter the chest sweat ion reabsorption rates observed in the older adults.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)302-315
Number of pages14
JournalExperimental Physiology
Volume106
Issue number1
Early online date2 Oct 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2021

Funding

This study was supported by a Grant‐in‐Aid for Scientific Research (16H04851 and 17H0253) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan.

FundersFunder number
Kobe Design University
Mr M. Fujiwara (Kobe University
Osaka International University
Kobe University
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

    Keywords

    • adaptation
    • ageing
    • aldosterone
    • controlled hyperthermia
    • heat acclimation
    • passive heating
    • sweat
    • sweat gland adaptation

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