Efficacy of Ceiling Fans for Mitigating Thermal Strain During Bed Rest in Older Adults During Heat Waves

Last updated: February 17, 2025
Sponsor: University of Ottawa
Overall Status: Completed

Phase

N/A

Condition

Fever

Aging

Treatment

Cooling with ceiling fan

No cooling (control)

Clinical Study ID

NCT06142890
H-11-21-7575
  • Ages 65-85
  • All Genders
  • Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Study Summary

With the increasing regularity and intensity of hot weather and heat waves, there is an urgent need to develop heat-alleviation strategies able to provide targeted protection for heat-vulnerable older adults. While air-conditioning provides the most effective protection from extreme heat, it is inaccessible for many individuals. Air-conditioning is also energy intensive, which can strain the electrical grid and, depending on the source of electricity generation, contribute to green house gas emissions. For these reasons, recent guidance has recommended the use of electric fans as a sustainable cooling alternative. While fans may increase sweat evaporation and heat loss in healthy, young adults, evidence supporting their use in older adults is scarce. Further, studies show that when environmental temperature exceeds skin temperature, fans are not effective and can even exacerbate hyperthermia in older adults. While older adults only account for ~13% of the population, they account for ~40% off all hospitalizations. In the context of sustainable cooling interventions, this is of particular importance given that many hospitals and long-term care homes do not have air-conditioning and rely on ceiling fans to enhance sweat evaporation while participants are bed-resting. While recent biophysical modelling has suggested that pedestal fans likely provide a clinically meaningful cooling effect (proposed to be ≥0.3°C) in temperatures below ~34°C in older adults, the efficacy of ceiling fans in mitigating heat strain in these conditions is currently unknown.

To address these knowledge gaps, this randomized crossover trial will evaluate body core temperature, cardiovascular strain, orthostatic intolerance, dehydration, and thermal comfort in adults aged 65-85 years exposed for 8-hours to conditions experienced during indoor overheating occurring during a heat wave in a temperate continental climate (31°C, 45% relative humidity). Each participant will complete two randomized exposures that will differ only in the airflow generated by a ceiling fan: no airflow (control) or standard airflow. Participants will remain in a supine position for the duration of the 8-hour exposure period, except for during hour 7 when they will complete a series of cardiovascular autonomic response tests.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Male or female adults.

  • Aged 65-85 years.

  • Non-smoking.

  • English or French speaking.

  • Ability to provide informed consent.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Physical restriction (e.g., due to disease: intermittent claudication, renalimpairment, active proliferative retinopathy, unstable cardiac or pulmonary disease,disabling stroke, severe arthritis, etc.).

  • Use of or changes in medication judged by the patient or investigators to makeparticipation in this study inadvisable (e.g., medications increasing risk ofheat-related illness; beta blockers, anticholinergics, etc.)

  • Cardiac abnormalities identified via 12-lead ECG during an incremental exercise testto volitional fatigue (performed for all participants).

  • Peak aerobic capacity (VO2peak), as measured during an incremental exercise test tovolitional fatigue, exceeding the 50th percentile of age- and sex-specific normativevalues published by the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM).

Study Design

Total Participants: 20
Treatment Group(s): 2
Primary Treatment: Cooling with ceiling fan
Phase:
Study Start date:
December 05, 2023
Estimated Completion Date:
February 10, 2024

Connect with a study center

  • University of Ottawa

    Ottawa, Ontario K1N6N5
    Canada

    Site Not Available

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