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Title: The Effect of Water Dousing on Heat Strain and Performance During Endurance Running in the Heat. Author: Anderson M, Bellenger C, Chaseling GK, Chalmers S. Journal: Int J Sports Physiol Perform; 2024 Nov 01; 19(11):1291-1298. PubMed ID: 39231499. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Assess the effect of water dousing on heat strain and performance during self- and fixed-paced exercise in the heat. DESIGN: Crossover, block-randomized controlled trial. METHODS: Thirteen trained runners completed a 10-km time trial (TT) and 60-minute fixed-pace run (60% velocity of V˙O2max) in a 30.4 °C, 47.4% relative humidity environment using either water dousing (DOUSE) or no dousing (CON). RESULTS: Ten-kilometer TT performance was faster in DOUSE compared to CON (44:11 [40:48, 47:34] vs 44:38 [41:21, 47:56] min:s; P = .033). Change in core temperature (Tc) was not different between groups during the TT (+0.02 [-0.04, 0.07] °C in DOUSE; P = .853) or fixed-pace run (+0.02 [-0.15, 0.18] °C; P = .848). Change in mean skin temperature was lower in DOUSE during the TT (-1.80 [-2.15, -1.46] °C; P < .001) and fixed-pace run (-1.38 [-1.81, -0.96] °C; P < .001). Heart rate was lower for DOUSE during the fixed-pace run (-3.5 [-6.8, -0.2] beats/min; P = .041) but not during the TT (-0.2 [-2.5, 2.1] beats/min; P = .853). Thermal sensation was lower for DOUSE during the TT (-49.3 [-72.1, -26.1] mm; P < .001) and fixed-pace run (-44.7 [-59.7, -29.6] mm; P < .001). Rating of perceived exertion was not different between groups for the TT (-0.2 [-0.7, 0.3]; P = .390) or fixed-pace run (-0.2 [-0.8, 0.4]; P = .480). Sweat rate was lower for DOUSE for the TT (-0.37 [-0.53, -0.22] L/h; P < .001) and fixed-pace run (-0.37 [-0.48, -0.26] L/h; P < .001). CONCLUSION: Water dousing improves 10-km TT performance in the heat but does not affect Tc. The positive change in thermal perception (via lower skin temperature) during the TT likely drives this benefit.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]