Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Sweating early

 During an afternoon walk, I started sweating. It is very unusal. For  awhile now, mostly I have been doing strength training and not much cardio. Only 4 moderate sessions of elliptical cardio in and already my body is thermoregulating.

With some chatgpt help:

Great question — and you're tapping into a fascinating and measurable aspect of cardiovascular adaptation: improved thermoregulation, especially earlier onset of sweating.


🧠 Short Answer:

For most untrained individuals, noticeable improvements in thermoregulation (like sweating earlier) can occur in about:

🔥 5–10 sessions of moderate-to-intense cardio over 2–3 weeks.

This assumes you're doing cardio that elevates your core temperature significantly (like brisk running, cycling, rowing, HIIT, etc.) for 30–45 minutes, 3–5 times per week.


📈 What’s Happening Inside the Body?

1. Cardio Improves Heat Dissipation

  • Your body becomes better at cooling itself.

  • Sweat glands activate earlier during exertion or heat exposure.

  • Your plasma volume increases, improving sweat output and skin blood flow.

2. Earlier Sweating = More Efficient Cooling

  • Trained individuals start sweating sooner and more effectively, preventing overheating.

  • In untrained people, the body “waits” too long, leading to overheating before sweat starts.


🧪 Research & Examples:

  • Study on heat acclimation (e.g., Wendt et al., 2007):
    Shows thermoregulatory changes — including earlier sweating — after 5–10 days of heat exposure and/or exercise.

  • Cardio training adaptation timeline:

    • Session 1–3: Body starts adapting — small changes in core temp response.

    • Session 4–7: Sweat onset time decreases measurably.

    • Session 8–10+: Full adaptation for moderate heat (earlier sweat, more sweat, lower HR in heat).


Looks like heart rate going down is another way to check adaptation. 

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