A physiological strain index to evaluate heat stress

Daniel S. Moran, Avraham Shitzer, Kent B. Pandolf

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

491 Scopus citations

Abstract

A physiological strain index (PSI), based on rectal temperature (T(re)) and heart rate (HR), capable of indicating heat strain online and analyzing existing databases, has been developed. The index rates the physiological strain on a universal scale of 0-10. It was assumed that the maximal T(re) and HR rise during exposure to exercise heat stress from normothermia to hyperthermia was 3°C (36.5-39.5°C) and 120 beats/min (60-180 beats/min), respectively. T(re) and HR were assigned the same weight functions as follows: PSI = 5(T(ret) - T(re0)·(39.5 - T(re0))-1 + 5(HR(t) - HR0)·(180 - HR0)-1, where T(ret) and HR(t) are simultaneous measurements taken at any time during the exposure and T(re0) and HR0 are the initial measurements. PSI was applied to data obtained from 100 men performing exercise in the heat (40°C, 40% relative humidity;1.34 m/s at a 2% grade) for 120 min. A separate database representing seven men wearing protective clothing and exercising in hot-dry and hot-wet environmental conditions was applied to test the validity of the present index. PSI differentiated significantly (P <0.05) between the two climates. This index has the potential to be widely accepted and to serve universally after extending its validity to women and other age groups.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)R129-R134
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology - Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology
Volume275
Issue number1 44-1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1998
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Heart rate
  • Indexes
  • Rectal temperature

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