Experimental research in environmentally induced hyperthermic older persons: A systematic quantitative literature review mapping the available evidence
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Cunningham, Sarah JK
Morris, Norman R
Xu, Zhiwei
Rutherford, Shannon
Binnewies, Sebastian
Meade, Robert D
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Abstract
The heat-related health burden is expected to persist and worsen in the coming years due to an ageing global population and climate change. Defining the breadth and depth of our understanding of age-related changes in thermoregulation can identify underlying causes and strategies to protect vulnerable individuals from heat. We conducted the first systematic quantitative literature review to provide context to the historical experimental research of healthy older adults – compared to younger adults or unhealthy age matched cases – during exogenous heat strain, focusing on factors that influence thermoregulatory function (e.g. co-morbidities). We identified 4,455 articles, with 147 meeting eligibility criteria. Most studies were conducted in the US (39%), Canada (29%), and Japan (12%), with 71% of the 3,411 participants being male. 71% of the studies compared younger and older adults, while 34% compared two groups of older adults with and without factors influencing thermoregulation. Key factors included age combined with another factor (23%), underlying biological mechanisms (18%), age independently (15%), influencing health conditions (15%), adaptation potential (12%), environmental conditions (9%), and therapeutic/pharmacological interventions (7%). Our results suggest future controlled experimental research should focus on the age-related changes in thermoregulation in the very old, females, overlooked chronic heat-sensitive health conditions (e.g. pulmonary, renal, mental disorders), the impact of multimorbidity, prolonged and cumulative effects of extreme heat, evidence-based policy of control measures (e.g. personal cooling strategies), pharmaceutical interactions, and interventions stimulating protective physiological adaptation. These controlled studies will inform the directions and use of limited resources in ecologically valid fieldwork studies.
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Temperature
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This is an Accepted Manuscript version of the following article, accepted for publication in Temperature. Aaron J. E. Bach, Sarah J. K. Cunningham, Norman R. Morris, Zhiwei Xu, Shannon Rutherford, Sebastian Binnewies & Robert D. Meade (2023) Experimental research in environmentally induced hyperthermic older persons: A systematic quantitative literature review mapping the available evidence, Temperature, DOI: 10.1080/23328940.2023.2242062. It is deposited under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Medical physiology
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Bach, AJE; Cunningham, SJK; Morris, NR; Xu, Z; Rutherford, S; Binnewies, S; Meade, RD, Experimental research in environmentally induced hyperthermic older persons: A systematic quantitative literature review mapping the available evidence, Temperature, 2023