Evidence for a Direct Role of Physical Effort in the Etiology of Heatstroke Injury and Mortality,
Abstract
A total of 171 untrained, unacclimatized and unanesthetized rates were used to evaluate the effects of sedentary and work-induced hyperthermia on the incidence of mortality and cellular injury, 24 h post-exposure. Cellular injury was defined as serum transaminase activity (SGPT and SGOT) exceeding 1000 IU/L (heatstroke levels). Both the percent mortality and the percentage of 24 h survivors with transaminase levels above 1000 IU/L were plotted against maximum core temperatures. Exertion-induced hyperthermia produced a significantly higher incidence of cellular injury and heatstroke death at lower core temperatures than hyperthermia alone. With hyperthermia only, the SGPT and SGOT dose-response curves were identical. When work was combined with hyperthermia, there was a greater incidence of elevated SGOT at lower core temperatures. These curves bore a striking resemblance to curves reflecting heat and/or work induced mortality in humans. The results suggest a direct role of physical effort in causing heatstroke injury and mortality. (Author)
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 13, 1978
- Accession Number
- ADA050547
Entities
People
- I. Sils
- M. Mager
- R. E. L. Criss
- R. W. Hubbard
- W. T. Matthew
Organizations
- United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine