Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
551091 Applied Ergonomics 2014 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examined changes in cognition and mood during stimulated firefighting in heat.•We examined the separate effects of caffeine and menthol on mental efforts.•Cognition is well maintained during short duration firefighting.•Mood is severely deteriorated even with regular rests.•No effects of caffeine and menthol on cognition and mood.

This study examined the separate effects of caffeine and menthol on cognition and mood during simulated firefighting in the heat. Participants (N = 10) performed three trials in a counterbalanced order, either with 400 mg caffeine, menthol lozenges, or placebo. The simulated firefighting consisted of 2 bouts of 20-min treadmill exercise and one bout of 20-min stepping exercise in the heat with two brief 15-min rest periods between each exercise phase. Exercise induced significant dehydration (>3%) and elevated rectal temperature (>38.9 °C), for all three conditions. Neither caffeine nor menthol reduced perceived exertion compared to placebo (p > 0.05). Mood ratings (i.e., alertness, hedonic tone, tension) significantly deteriorated over time (p < 0.05), but there was no difference among the three conditions. Simple reaction time, short-term memory, and retrieval memory did not alter with treatments or repeated evaluations. Reaction accuracy from a math test remained unchanged throughout the experimental period; reaction time from the math test was significantly faster after exposure to the heat (p < 0.05). It is concluded that, exhaustive exercise in the heat severely impacted mood, but minimally impacted cognition. These treatments failed to show ergogenic benefits in a simulated firefighting paradigm in a hot environment.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Human-Computer Interaction
Authors
, , , , , , , , , ,