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RECRUITING
NCT07664462
NA

Working in the Heat at Simulated Altitude: Effects of Normobaric Hypoxia on Physiological Strain

Sponsor: University of Ottawa

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Extreme heat events are becoming more frequent, intense, and prolonged, increasing the risk of heat-related illness among workers performing physically demanding work in hot environments. Current occupational heat-stress guidelines aim to limit excessive increases in core body temperature and physiological strain through the use of work-rest schedules. However, these guidelines do not provide clear direction on the safe, maximum duration of continuous work that can be performed before heat-mitigation controls should be implemented, known as the initial stay time. Recent work has generated initial stay time recommendations for young and older workers performing moderate-intensity work in the heat, but these estimates were developed under normoxic conditions. In many occupational settings, workers may be exposed to additional environmental stressors such as hypoxia, including work at altitude or in oxygen-reduced environments. Hypoxia can increase cardiovascular strain, reduce arterial oxygen saturation, and alter exercise tolerance, potentially compromising the effectiveness of heat-stress guidance developed under normal oxygen conditions. Older workers may be especially vulnerable due to age-related reductions in thermoregulatory and cardiovascular function. To date, it remains unclear whether hypoxia alters physiological strain during work in the heat or whether current initial stay time and recovery recommendations remain protective under combined heat and hypoxic stress. The primary objective of this study is to determine whether exposure to hypoxia increases physiological strain during moderate-intensity work in the heat in young and older males. Specifically, investigators will assess whether normoxia-derived initial stay times and recovery recommendations for work at 29°C wet-bulb globe (37.5°C, 35% RH) temperature remain effective when workers are exposed to hypoxia equivalent to 14% inspired oxygen (simulating \~3000 m in altitude). Healthy young and older males will complete simulated occupational heat exposure under two conditions: heat alone and combined heat plus hypoxia. Participants will perform moderate-intensity treadmill work based on age-specific initial stay times, followed by prescribed work-rest cycles and seated recovery. Measures of core temperature, cardiovascular strain, oxygen saturation, skin temperature, hydration status, perceptual responses, mood, symptoms of environmental stress, and cognitive function will be assessed to determine whether hypoxia modifies responses to work in the heat. This study will provide important evidence on whether occupational heat-stress guidance requires refinement when workers are exposed to combined heat and hypoxic stress.

Official title: Effects of Normobaric Hypoxia on Initial Stay Time and Physiological Strain During Moderate-Intensity Work in the Heat in Young and Older Males

Key Details

Gender

MALE

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

20

Start Date

2026-06-17

Completion Date

2027-02-28

Last Updated

2026-06-24

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Simulated Occupational heat exposure under normoxic conditions

Participants complete a simulated moderate-intensity occupational heat exposure protocol involving treadmill walking in a hot environment (37.5°C, 35% RH) under normoxic conditions (\~20.9% inspired oxygen). Participants walk until they reach their initial stay time, followed by prescribed work-rest cycles and seated recovery.

OTHER

Simulated Occupational heat exposure under hypoxic conditions

Participants complete a simulated moderate-intensity occupational heat exposure protocol involving treadmill walking in a hot environment (37.5°C, 35% RH) with an added hypoxic exposure equivalent to 14% inspired oxygen. Participants walk until they reach their initial stay time, followed by prescribed work-rest cycles and seated recovery.

Locations (1)

University of Ottawa

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada