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The Role of Environmental Temperatures in Respiratory Control
Sponsor: Indiana University
Summary
Warfighters are frequently exposed to environments and life-support systems that increase breathing resistance and the work of breathing (WOB), such as aircraft on-board oxygen generation systems and underwater breathing apparatuses. Elevated WOB increases the perception of breathing difficulty (dyspnea) and has been associated with impaired cognitive performance, including slower reaction time and reduced accuracy during attention-demanding tasks. These effects are particularly concerning in operational settings that require rapid decision-making and precise motor responses. Despite growing recognition of this issue, critical gaps remain regarding strategies to mitigate the perceptual and cognitive consequences of elevated inspiratory resistance, especially under realistic operational stressors. The objective of this study is to determine whether exposing individuals to thermal stress alters breathing perception and cognitive performance during inspiratory resistance. Participants will perform inspiratory resistance breathing under thermoneutral, heat, and cold conditions to determine whether thermal stress amplifies WOB, breathing perception, and cognitive impairment.
Official title: Optimizing Mind-Body Interactions in Respiratory Control During Operationally Relevant Environmental Stressors
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 40 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
15
Start Date
2028-10-01
Completion Date
2029-12-31
Last Updated
2026-03-13
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Thermoneutral temperature environment
During thermoneutral conditions 34°C water will be perfused through special suit while participants resting the chamber set to 24°C and 40% room humidity.
Cold temperature environment
During the cold condition, 4°C water will be perfused through the special suit while participants rest in the chamber set to 4°C and 10% room humidity.
Hot temperature environment
During the hot condition, 50°C water will be perfused through the special suit while participants rest in the chamber set to 40°C and 40% room humidity.
Locations (1)
Multidisciplinary Engineering and Sciences Hall (MESH)
Bloomington, Indiana, United States