Hanano Kato, Yumi Okamoto, Junto Otsuka, Shotaro Yokoyama, Shoma Oshima, Kazuya Tajima, Atsushi Shiraishi, Ai Shiramoto, Tatsuro Amano
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Clothing hinders heat and moisture transfer from the skin to the environment, potentially disrupting thermoregulation during exercise in hot conditions. We therefore sought to determine whether wearing a newly developed T-shirt, designed to enhance breathability when dampened with sweat, would improve the clothing microclimate and thermoregulatory responses during a hot outdoor running. Eleven male distance runners were evaluated over two separate days, each involving two consecutive 30-min outdoor running sessions at a target heart rate of 120–130 bpm. A single-blind randomized crossover design was employed wherein participants wore a conventional polyester T-shirt (CON) during the first session on both days but changed into either the new fabric T-shirt (Dry Aeroflow [DAF]) or another CON for the second session. To account for uncontrolled outdoor conditions, responses during the first sessions of both days were compared, confirming no significant day-to-day differences in most variables. In the second session, wearing DAF reduced the intra-clothing humidity on the chest (p = 0.004) and back (p = 0.048) by 4.3% and decreased the upper arm skin temperature by 0.3 °C (p = 0.033) compared to wearing the CON. However, no differences in gastrointestinal temperature, mean skin temperature, or whole-body sweat rate were observed between the T-shirts (all p ≥ 0.178). These findings suggest that although the functional T-shirt improved the clothing microclimate and decreased the local skin temperature, these effects were likely marginal and did not significantly affect systemic thermoregulatory responses (e.g., core temperature, sweat rate) during outdoor running in a hot environment.
期刊介绍:
Fashion and Textiles aims to advance knowledge and to seek new perspectives in the fashion and textiles industry worldwide. We welcome original research articles, reviews, case studies, book reviews and letters to the editor.
The scope of the journal includes the following four technical research divisions:
Textile Science and Technology: Textile Material Science and Technology; Dyeing and Finishing; Smart and Intelligent Textiles
Clothing Science and Technology: Physiology of Clothing/Textile Products; Protective clothing ; Smart and Intelligent clothing; Sportswear; Mass customization ; Apparel manufacturing
Economics of Clothing and Textiles/Fashion Business: Management of the Clothing and Textiles Industry; Merchandising; Retailing; Fashion Marketing; Consumer Behavior; Socio-psychology of Fashion
Fashion Design and Cultural Study on Fashion: Aesthetic Aspects of Fashion Product or Design Process; Textiles/Clothing/Fashion Design; Fashion Trend; History of Fashion; Costume or Dress; Fashion Theory; Fashion journalism; Fashion exhibition.