ABSTRACT

Ensuring high levels of performance and safety in hot climates is a key consideration for sport scientists and coaches. Maximising Performance in Hot Environments is the first book with a project-based approach to focus solely on exercise in this common climactic condition, providing students and coaches with a clear and concise introduction to working with athletes in the heat. Rigorous in its physiological underpinnings, the book adopts a problem-based learning approach, encouraging students to engage with the science and apply it to practical, real-world scenarios.

Posing questions such as "how should athletes be monitored in high temperatures", "what are the ideal conditions for setting a world record in a 10,000m race", and "what special considerations should be made when working with masters athletes", the book covers all key topics, including:

  • The basics of human thermoregulation
  • The effect of high temperatures on performance
  • Heat acclimation and acclimatisation
  • Cooling
  • Hydration
  • Preventing heat-related illness and injury

Offering pedagogical features throughout to further enhance student learning, this is a truly innovative and unique resource. It is crucial reading for any student taking classes in environmental physiology, important applied reading for any exercise physiology students, and a vital companion for any sport scientist or coach working with athletes in high temperatures.

chapter 1|5 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

Basics of human thermoregulation

chapter 6|29 pages

Heat acclimation and acclimatisation

chapter 7|28 pages

Cooling

chapter 8|28 pages

(De)hydration

chapter 9|22 pages

Heat-related injury and illness