“…First, the increase in SSNA during whole-body heating is markedly blunted [8,12], a central neural limitation that appears to be specific to thermoregulatory stimuli [8,14]. Second, this attenuated efferent sympathetic response to heating is related to impaired reflex cutaneous vasodilation [8,12,13] and, presumably, sweating [15]. Further, sympathetic transduction to the cutaneous microvasculature during heat stress, estimated from the slope of the linear relation between increases in efferent SSNA and increases in microvascular cutaneous vascular conductance (CVC), is reduced in healthy older adults [8,12,13], owing to reductions in both the sensitivity and the range of end-organ thermoeffector responsiveness.…”