YAN Xiaoxue, WANG Qian, GUAN Aike, YANG Jie. Effects of rescue gloves on hand skin temperature and manual performance under local cold exposure[J]. Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, 2024, 41(6): 694-700. DOI: 10.11836/JEOM24009
Citation: YAN Xiaoxue, WANG Qian, GUAN Aike, YANG Jie. Effects of rescue gloves on hand skin temperature and manual performance under local cold exposure[J]. Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, 2024, 41(6): 694-700. DOI: 10.11836/JEOM24009

Effects of rescue gloves on hand skin temperature and manual performance under local cold exposure

  • Background Cold environments reduce work efficiency and increase the risk of frostbite.
    Objective To investigate the effects on cold protection and manual performance of rescue gloves in cold environments, and to preliminarily verify the feasibility of related quantitative characterization methods.
    Methods An experiment was conducted in a large and a small artificial climate chamber. 12 male right-handed university students were recruited. The experiment was divided into two parts, with 0-10 min as the baseline phase and 10-50 min as the test phase. Subjects sat quietly in a 16 ℃ large chamber, and hands were exposed to a small chamber at 0 ℃ either barely (control group) or with rescue gloves (experimental group). Skin temperatures of the five fingers (thumb, index finger, middle finger, ring finger, and little finger), as well as the dorsal and palm of the hands were measured. In addition, grip strength, manual dexterity, maximum finger flexion, and tactile sensitivity of the hands were measured as the indicators of manual performance.
    Results In the control group, cold-induced vasodilation occurred when the skin temperature of the five fingers were lowered to about 10 ℃. The maximum rate of change in skin temperature of the control group was in the following order: thumb>index finger>middle finger>little finger>ring finger>dorsal>palm, 165.7 ℃·h−1 in the thumb, 80.0 and 89.9 ℃·h−1 in the palm and dorsal respectively. In addition, the minimum skin temperature of the thumb was 6.6 ℃. Compared with the control group: the rate of change of skin temperature in the experimentalgroup decreased by about 50%; the grip strength decreased by 15% after wearing the rescue gloves (P<0.05); no differences in manual dexterity, maximum finger flexion, and tactile sensitivity were statistically significant (P>0.05).
    Conclusion This study proved that the rescue gloves improved the thermal comfort of hands while better balancing the effect of cold exposure on manual performance. The quantitative characterization methods can evaluate the protective performance and manual performance of the rescue gloves, which provides a reliable theoretical foundation and reference basis for further experiments.
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