Identifying the Limits of Survivability in Heat-exposed Older Females
Identifying the Upper Environmental Limits of Thermal Compensation in Older Human Females Using a Rapid Humidity Ramp Protocol
University of Ottawa
12 participants
Jul 16, 2025
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Climate change increases extreme heat events, elevating global heat-illness risk. Females have reduced heat loss capacity (\~5%) compared to males, driven by differences in skin blood flow and sweating responses. While findings on sex-mediated mortality are mixed, some studies suggest older females (≥65 years), face higher heat-related mortality/morbidity risks, evidenced by disproportionate female deaths in the 2021 Western Heat Dome. The effects of extreme uncompensable heat on older females remain understudied. Heat exposure initially causes net heat gain, raising core/skin temperatures and triggering heat-loss responses. Under compensable heat stress, heat loss balances gain, stabilizing core temperature. Uncompensable heat stress (exceeding maximal dissipation capacity) causes continuous core temperature rise, posing severe health risks. The specific temperature and relative humidity (RH) limits where compensability is lost are critical survival determinants, influenced by age and sex. Ramping protocols identify these limits: participants face progressively increasing heat stress (e.g., staged humidity rises) while core temperature is monitored. Core temperature typically stabilizes initially, then exhibits an abrupt rapid increase at an inflection point, operationally defined as the limit of compensability. Despite increasing use, ramping protocol validity for accurately identifying this threshold remains unverified. This project assesses ramping protocol validity for determining uncompensable conditions in older females and evaluates cumulative thermal and cardiovascular strain, as well as psychological and cognitive responses to both uncompensable and compensable heat. Participants will complete five trials. Trial 1 (Ramping): Rest at 42°C, 28% RH for 70min, then incremental RH increases (3% every 10min) to 70% RH. Individual core temperature (rectal) inflection points are identified from the ramping trial. Trials 2-5 (Fixed Conditions, Randomized): i) \~10% below inflection; ii) \~5% below inflection; iii) \~5% above inflection; iv) Thermo-neutral control (26°C, 45% RH). Comparing the rate of rectal temperature change and cumulative strain during prolonged fixed exposures (especially below vs. above inflection) will validate if the ramping inflection point represents the true limit of compensability for older females.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria4
- Non-smoking.
- English or French speaking.
- Ability to provide informed consent.
- With or without a) chronic hypertension (elevated resting blood pressure; as defined by Heart and Stroke Canada and Hypertension Canada), b) type 2 diabetes as defined by Diabetes Canada, with at least 5 years having elapsed since time of diagnosis
Exclusion Criteria6
- Episode(s) of severe hypoglycemia (requiring the assistance of another person) within the previous year, or inability to sense hypoglycemia (hypoglycemia unawareness).
- Serious complications related to diabetes (gastroparesis, renal disease, uncontrolled hypertension, severe autonomic neuropathy).
- Uncontrolled hypertension - BP \>150 mmHg systolic or \>95 mmHg diastolic in a sitting position.
- Restrictions in physical activity due to disease (e.g. intermittent claudication, renal impairment, active proliferative retinopathy, unstable cardiac or pulmonary disease, disabling stroke, severe arthritis, etc.).
- Use of or changes in medication judged by the patient or investigators to make participation in this study inadvisable.
- Cardiac abnormalities identified during screening
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Interventions
Participants are exposed to 42°C and 28% relative humidity for 70 minutes. Thereafter, humidity is increased 3% until an ambient humidity of 70% is achieved. The humidity at which rectal temperature inflect is subsequently determined.
After a 1 hour equilibrium at 42°C and 28% relative humidity, humidity will be increased 3% every 10 min until it is \~5% higher than the participants' rectal esophageal temperature inflection point identified in the humidity ramp protocol. These conditions will be held constant for the remainder of the 9-hour exposure period (starting from the beginning of equilibrium). Tap water will be provided at regular intervals to limit dehydration.
After a 1 hour equilibrium at 42°C and 28% relative humidity, humidity will be increased 3% every 10 min until it is \~5% lower than the participants' individual rectal temperature inflection point identified in the humidity ramp protocol. These conditions will be held constant for the remainder of the 9-hour exposure period (starting from the beginning of equilibrium). Tap water will be provided at regular intervals to limit dehydration.
After a 1 hour equilibrium at 42°C and 28% relative humidity, humidity will be increased 3% every 10 min until it is \~10% lower than the participants' individual rectal temperature inflection point identified in the humidity ramp protocol. These conditions will be held constant for the remainder of the 9-hour exposure period (starting from the beginning of equilibrium). Tap water will be provided at regular intervals to limit dehydration.
Participants are exposed for 9-hours to 28°C with 35% relative humidity. Participant will be allowed to drink tap water ad libitum.
Locations(2)
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NCT07032493