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HERO ID
9233337
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Relieving thermal discomfort: Effects of sprayed L-menthol on perception, performance, and time trial cycling in the heat
Author(s)
Barwood, MJ; Corbett, J; Thomas, K; Twentyman, P; ,
Year
2015
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science
ISSN:
0905-7188
EISSN:
1600-0838
Publisher
WILEY
Location
HOBOKEN
Page Numbers
211-218
Language
English
PMID
25943672
DOI
10.1111/sms.12395
Web of Science Id
WOS:000354210500023
URL
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/sms.12395
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Abstract
L-menthol stimulates cutaneous thermoreceptors and induces cool sensations improving thermal comfort, but has been linked to heat storage responses; this could increase risk of heat illness during self-paced exercise in the heat. Therefore, L-menthol application could lead to a discrepancy between behavioral and autonomic thermoregulatory drivers. Eight male participants volunteered. They were familiarized and then completed two trials in hot conditions (33.5â°C, 33% relative humidity) where their t-shirt was sprayed with CONTROL-SPRAY or MENTHOL-SPRAY after 10âkm (i.e., when they were hot and uncomfortable) of a 16.1-km cycling time trial (TT). Thermal perception [thermal sensation (TS) and comfort (TC)], thermal responses [rectal temperature (Trec ), skin temperature (Tskin )], perceived exertion (RPE), heart rate, pacing (power output), and TT completion time were measured. MENTHOL-SPRAY made participants feel cooler and more comfortable and resulted in lower RPE (i.e., less exertion) yet performance was unchanged [TT completion: CONTROL-SPRAY 32.4 (2.9) and MENTHOL-SPRAY 32.7 (3.0) min]. Trec rate of increase was 1.40 (0.60) and 1.45 (0.40) °C/h after CONTROL-SPRAY and MENTHOL-SPRAY application, which were not different. Spraying L-menthol toward the end of self-paced exercise in the heat improved perception, but did not alter performance and did not increase heat illness risk.
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