The Clamping of End-Tidal Carbon Dioxide Does Not Influence Cognitive Function Performance During Moderate Hyperthermia With or Without Skin Temperature Manipulation

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY(2021)

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摘要
Increases in body temperature from heat stress (i.e., hyperthermia) generally impairs cognitive function across a range of domains and complexities, but the relative contribution from skin versus core temperature changes remains unclear. Hyperthermia also elicits a hyperventilatory response that decreases the partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide (PetCO2) and subsequently cerebral blood flow that may influence cognitive function. We studied the role of skin and core temperature along with PetCO2 on cognitive function across a range of domains. Eleven males completed a randomized, single-blinded protocol consisting of poikilocapnia (POIKI, no PetCO2 control) or isocapnia (ISO, PetCO2 maintained at baseline levels) during passive heating using a water-perfused suit (water temperature ~ 49 degrees C) while middle cerebral artery velocity (MCA(v)) was measured continuously as an index of cerebral blood flow. Cognitive testing was completed at baseline, neutral core-hot skin (37.0 +/- 0.2 degrees C-37.4 +/- 0.3 degrees C), hot core-hot skin (38.6 +/- 0.3 degrees C-38.7 +/- 0.2 degrees C), and hot core-cooled skin (38.5 +/- 0.3 degrees C-34.7 +/- 0.6 degrees C). The cognitive test battery consisted of a detection task (psychomotor processing), 2-back task (working memory), set-shifting and Groton Maze Learning Task (executive function). At hot core-hot skin, poikilocapnia led to significant (both p < 0.05) decreases in PetCO2 ( increment -21%) and MCA(v) ( increment -26%) from baseline, while isocapnia clamped PetCO2 ( increment + 4% from baseline) leading to a significantly (p = 0.023) higher MCA(v) ( increment -18% from baseline) compared to poikilocapnia. There were no significant differences in errors made on any task (all p > 0.05) irrespective of skin temperature or PetCO2 manipulation. We conclude that neither skin temperature nor PetCO2 maintenance significantly alter cognitive function during passive hyperthermia.
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关键词
passive hyperthermia, cognitive function, isocapnia, end-tidal carbon dioxide, clamping, middle cerebral artery velocity, executive function, working memory
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