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The Influence of Capsaicin Gel During Exercise Within the Heat

Phase 4
Completed
Conditions
Acute Exercise
Heat Exposure
Interventions
Biological: Capsaicin
Biological: Control Gel
Other: Exercise
Other: Hot environment
Registration Number
NCT05298202
Lead Sponsor
University of Nebraska
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to examine the human thermoregulatory impact of applying a commercially available capsaicin gel to the skin prior to moderate intensity walking under heated conditions. Experimental Visits will consist of 30 min of treadmill walking at a moderate pace (3.5 mph, 5% grade) under hot conditions (38°C, 60%RH) and will be randomized and counterbalanced for capsaicin gel or a hypoallergenic gel (control) application.

Gels will be applied to areas commonly exposed during outdoor activity in warm conditions (shoulder to wrist, mid thigh to ankle). Accordingly, participants will wear shorts and a tank top shirt during exercise. Core temperature, skin temperature, galvanic skin response, laser doppler blood flow, and heart rate will be continuously recorded throughout the exercise bout via an integrated analog to digital converter. Sweat will be collected during exercise using commercially available absorbent patches. Thermal sensation will be assessed throughout exercise via the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) thermal sensation likert scale (cold to hot).

Lastly, nude body weight will be recorded pre and post exercise for sweat rate determination. The capsaicin and control trials will be separated by a 7-14 day washout period

Detailed Description

3 experimental visits to the laboratory will be conducted. All visits will take place at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, Exercise Physiology Laboratory. Visit 1 will consist of the physical activity readiness questionnaire (PARQ), adverse reaction to capsaicin, and body composition (hydrostatic weigh, bioelectrical impedance). Visits 2 and 3 will be separated by 7-14 days, randomized, and counterbalanced for experimental (capsaicin) and control (hypoallergenic cream) trials. Both the experimental and control visits will follow the same protocol.

Participants will arrive following an overnight fast state while also refraining from strenuous activity, alcohol consumption, tobacco use, and recreational drugs for the previous 24 hour period. During these visit researchers will apply capsaicin using a gloved hand from shoulder to wrist and mid thigh to ankle (areas outside of the clothing). A hypoallergenic cream will be applied during the control visit.

Exercise will consist of 30 min of moderate intensity treadmill walking (3.5 mph at 5% grade) within a heated temperature/humidity controlled chamber (38°C, 60% relative humidity). Participants will be weighed before, and after completion of the exercise calculate sweat rate. Prior to the exercise session, participants will sit for 5 min in an ambient room temperature environment as a baseline. During baseline and during the exercise core temperature, skin temperature, laser doppler blood flow, galvanic skin response, and heart rate will be collected continuously. Sweat patches will be adhered to the forehead during exercise at minute 10 for collection of sweat composition over the next 10-20 minutes. Thermal perception using the ASHRAE scale (cold to hot) will be assessed pre and during exercise.

EXPERIMENTAL VISIT 1 Visit 1 will take approximately 1 hour. Participants will then complete the physical activity readiness questionnaire (PARQ) to be cleared for physical activity. Participants will have a small amount of the capsaicin cream applied to a small area of the forearm (\~2 x 2 in) to test for any adverse reaction over a period of 15 minutes. Those without a reaction will have height, weight, and body fat composition measured. Height and weight will be measured using a medical scale and stadiometer, respectively. Body fat will be assessed with hydrostatic weighing using an electronic load cell based system (Exertech, Dresbach, MN) correcting for residual lung volume or via a bio-electrical impedance analyzer (InBodyUSA, Cerritos, CA).

EXPERIMENTAL VISITS 2 AND 3 Visits 2 and 3 will take approximately 2 hours each. Upon arrival at the lab, a nude body weight will be collected with the subject in a private room. While still in the room, subjects will self-insert a rectal thermistor 12-15 cm beyond the anal sphincter and don a chest strap heart rate monitor. After dressing in their exercise clothing, subjects will exit the private room so that chest, forearm, and calf thermistors can be adhered to the skin with tape. Laser doppler flow (forearm and or/finger) will be adhered with tape and galvanic skin response (fingers) will be adhered using Velcro straps to the skin. Measuring instruments will be recorded using an integrated digital to analog converter (ADInstruments, Colorado Springs, CO).

Following instrumentation, subjects will sit for 5 minutes as a baseline in a temperate environment. Immediately after, a researcher with gloved hands will topically apply capsaicin or the control hypoallergenic cream from the shoulder to wrist and mid-thigh to ankle. Subjects will then enter the heat chamber (38°C, 60% relative humidity) and immediately begin a 30-minute walk on a treadmill (3.5 mph, 5% grade). Subjects will be intermittently asked to hold their arm steady for laser doppler flow collection (10, 20, 30 minutes). Subjects will also briefly pause at minute 10 in order to adhere an absorbent patch to their forehead for sweat collection over the following 10-20 minutes. Thermal perception using the ASHRAE scale (cold to hot) will be assessed pre and during exercise. After 30 minutes of walking, subjects will exit the chamber for removal of all skin and finger sensors. Subjects will then re-enter the private room, remove their own rectal thermistor with gloved hands, and then a final nude body weight will be recorded after toweling off.

The rectal thermistor will measure core temperature. The heart rate monitor will measure the beats of the heart. Skin thermistors will measure the temperature of the skin surfaces. Laser doppler flow measure the relative units of blood flow velocity. Galvanic skin response measures skin conductivity changes as individuals begin to sweat. Sweat is collected for assessment of sweat composition. Thermal perception is assessed for individual perception surrounding the temperature of the ambient environment. Nude body weight is measured to calculate sweat rate.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
12
Inclusion Criteria
  • 19-45 years of age
  • cleared for physical activity via the 2022 physical activity readiness questionnaire (PARQ)
  • no self-reported adverse reactions to capsaicin
Exclusion Criteria
  • outside 19-45 years of age
  • not cleared for physical activity via the 2022 physical activity readiness questionnaire (PARQ)
  • self-report or signs of sensitivity to capsaicin
  • pregnant
  • breast feeding

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Capsaicin gel applicationCapsaicinCapsaicin gel will be applied to the skin prior to exercise in the heat
Hypoallergenic gel applicationExerciseA hypoallergenic gel will be applied to the skin prior to exercise in the heat
Capsaicin gel applicationExerciseCapsaicin gel will be applied to the skin prior to exercise in the heat
Capsaicin gel applicationHot environmentCapsaicin gel will be applied to the skin prior to exercise in the heat
Hypoallergenic gel applicationControl GelA hypoallergenic gel will be applied to the skin prior to exercise in the heat
Hypoallergenic gel applicationHot environmentA hypoallergenic gel will be applied to the skin prior to exercise in the heat
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Average Skin Temperatureat 30 minutes of the exercise bout

average measurements from chest, forearm, and calf thermistors

Sweat CompositionFinal 10 minutes of the exercise bout (minutes 20-30 of exercise)

Sodium concentrations in collected sweat

Sweat Ratepre-post 30 minute exercise bout

To calculate sweat rate the difference in Nude body weight from pre to post exercise was measured (assuming weight loss is equal to sweat loss)

Skin Blood Flow30 minutes into exercise bout

Laser Doppler measurement of skin blood flow on the forearm. This is measured in arbitrary units where higher values represent higher blood flow.

Thermal Perceptionat 30 minutes of exercise

scale of thermal comfort developed by the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE). The ASHRAE is a 7-point scale to asses thermal sensation, which consists of seven verbal anchors: "cold (-3)", "cool (-2)", "slightly cool (-1)", "neutral (0)", "slightly warm (1)", "warm (2)", and "hot (3)". The score is reported as the value in "()"

Core Temperatureat 30 minutes of the exercise bout

measured with rectal thermistor

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Nebraska at Omaha

🇺🇸

Omaha, Nebraska, United States

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