No association between hand and foot temperature responses during local cold stress and rewarming

L Norrbrand, R Kölegård, ME Keramidas… - European Journal of …, 2017 - Springer
L Norrbrand, R Kölegård, ME Keramidas, IB Mekjavic, O Eiken
European Journal of applied physiology, 2017Springer
Purpose The purpose was to examine whether associations exist between temperature
responses in the fingers vs. toes and hand vs. foot during local cold-water immersion and
rewarming phases. Methods Seventy healthy subjects (58 males, 12 females) immersed
their right hand or right foot, respectively, in 8° C water for 30 min (CWI phase), followed by a
15-min spontaneous rewarming (RW) in 25° C air temperature. Results Temperature was
lower in the toes than the fingers during the baseline phase (27.8±3.0 vs. 33.9±2.5° C, p< …
Purpose
The purpose was to examine whether associations exist between temperature responses in the fingers vs. toes and hand vs. foot during local cold-water immersion and rewarming phases.
Methods
Seventy healthy subjects (58 males, 12 females) immersed their right hand or right foot, respectively, in 8 °C water for 30 min (CWI phase), followed by a 15-min spontaneous rewarming (RW) in 25 °C air temperature.
Results
Temperature was lower in the toes than the fingers during the baseline phase (27.8 ± 3.0 vs. 33.9 ± 2.5 °C, p < 0.001), parts of the CWI phase (min 20–30: 8.8 ± 0.7 vs. 9.7 ± 1.4 °C, p < 0.001), and during the RW phase (peak temperature: 22.5 ± 5.1 vs. 32.7 ± 3.6 °C, p < 0.001). Cold-induced vasodilatation (CIVD) was more common in the fingers than in the toes (p < 0.001). Within the first 10 min of CWI, 61% of the subjects exhibited a CIVD response in the fingers, while only 6% of the subjects had a CIVD response in the toes. There was a large variability of temperature responses both within and between extremities, and there was a weak correlation between finger- and toe temperature both during the CWI (r = 0.21, p = 0.08) and the RW phases (r = 0.26, p = 0.03).
Conclusions
Results suggest that there is generally a lower temperature in the toes than the fingers after a short time of local cold exposure and that the thermal responses of the fingers/hands are not readily transferable to the toes/foot.
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