Passive-heat stress does not induce muscle fatigue, central activation failure or changes in intracortical properties of wrist flexors

Bender, R., T. E. Wilson, R. L. Hoffman, and B. C. Clark. 2011. “Passive-heat stress does not induce muscle fatigue, central activation failure or changes in intracortical properties of wrist flexors”. Ergonomics 54 (6): 565-75.

Abstract

This study evaluated the effect of passive-heat stress on the neuromuscular properties of the wrist flexor muscles, which are commonly used in manual labour hand tasks. A combination of techniques were utilised, involving nerve stimulation and paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation to assess changes in muscle strength, contractile properties, fatigue-resistance and central activation as well as indices of intracortical excitability in 10healthy humans who were exposed to a passive heat stress protocol as well as a normothermia control protocol. Passive-heat stress increased core body temperature ∼1°C (37.2 ± 0.4 to 38.2 ± 0.4°C ; p < 0.01), mean skin temperature (34.5 ± 0.7°C to 37.3 ± 1.1°C; p < 0.01), and heart rate (79.5 ± 20.0 to 110.0 ± 23.0 beats/min; p = 0.04). No effect was observed on muscle strength, contractile properties, muscle fatigability, central activation orindices of intracortical excitability (p > 0.05). These data indicate that allowing internal temperatures of workers to increase ≤1.0°C does not affect neuromuscular properties of the wrist flexors.

Last updated on 08/16/2023