1. Acute Physiological Response of Live-Fire Simulation Activities Affecting Cardiovascular Health in Live-Fire Instructors
- Author
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So Yeon Kong, Dae In Lee, Dong-Min Shin, Gwan-Jin Park, Je-Hwan Oh, Beom-Seok Ku, and Sang Chul Kim
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cardiovascular health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Vital signs ,Simulation training ,Heart Rate ,Firefighters ,Fire protection ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Heart rate variability ,business ,Biomarkers ,Normal range - Abstract
OBJECTIVES This study aimed to assess acute physiological response of fire suppression simulation affecting cardiovascular health during repeated bouts of simulation. METHODS Fifteen live-fire instructors were randomly divided into three groups according to fire suppression simulation frequency. Vital signs, biomarkers, and heart rate variability (HRV) were measured before and after simulation. RESULTS Vital signs increased immediately after fire simulation and returned to the normal range after 2 h. Most biomarker levels were changed within the normal ranges 72 h after the simulation training. However, one of the HRV frequency domains, HF power, was severely suppressed after 1 h and tended to recover after 2 h of simulation (p
- Published
- 2021
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