Effect of hidromeiosis on sweat drippage during acclimation to humid heat
- 1 August 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in European Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 44 (2) , 123-133
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00421090
Abstract
Sweat rate and the rate of change in sweat drippage were studied during the acclimation of eight healthy male subject during exposure to heat during 10 consecutive days. During acclimation to hot humid conditions, the increase in total body sweat rate results in an increase in the rate of sweat drippage. We found, however, that on each day the drippage rate markedly decreased with time after the 1st h of heat exposure. This hidromeiosis was investigated as a function of the heat exposure time. No shortening of the onset time of hidromeiosis occurred with acclimation. With repeated heat exposures, the initial sweat rates in response to stress increased, and the subsequent decline became larger with higher sweat rates at the time of onset of hidromeiosis. Hidromeiosis appears to be a function of the degree of skin wettedness reached in the various local skin areas which determine the overall body skin wettedness upon which evaporative adjustments depend. Thus, the observed overshoot in total sweat rate as indicated by sweat drippage, and the subsequent hidromeiosis, result from initial oversweating in the poorly ventilated areas of skin. This sweat decline seems to be due to a reduction in output of the active sweat glands rather than to a reduction in active sweat gland number.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Modification of central sweating drive at the peripheryInternational Journal of Biometeorology, 1971
- The effects of soaking the skin in water at various temperatures on the subsequent ability to sweatThe Journal of Physiology, 1968
- Activity of the human eccrine sweat gland during exercise in a hot humid environment before and after acclimatizationThe Journal of Physiology, 1966
- HidromeiosisArchives of environmental health, 1965
- The time course of the decline in sweating produced by wetting the skinThe Journal of Physiology, 1964
- Observations on arm‐bag suppression of sweating and its relationship to thermal sweat‐gland ‘fatigue’The Journal of Physiology, 1962
- The Relationship Between Skin Hydration and the Suppression of Sweating1Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1957
- FATIGUE OF THE SWEAT GLANDSJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1955
- A comparison between the number and distribution of functioning eccrine sweat glands in Europeans and Africans*The Journal of Physiology, 1954
- The regional distribution of sweatingThe Journal of Physiology, 1945