

Exposure to cold and hypoxia, two conditions frequently encountered in mountain environments, endurance sports, and operational settings, creates an ideal scenario to observe how our peripheral physiology behaves. The hand, highly sensitive to changes in perfusion and vasomotor activity, becomes a key region for studying the effects of thermal stress.
In this article, we review a scientific study that analyzed how hand temperature changes during and after cold-water immersion under two conditions: normoxia and normobaric hypoxia. Temperature was continuously monitored using thermocouples and infrared thermography, allowing for a detailed thermal map of the hand’s response.
During the 30-minute immersion of the hand in 8 °C water, the researchers found that:
This finding is particularly relevant because earlier literature suggested that hypoxia exaggerates cold-induced vasoconstriction. However, this study shows that under acute and controlled exposures, hypoxia does not significantly modify the cooling response.
Clear differences emerged during the recovery phase. Across the 15 minutes of spontaneous rewarming, thermography revealed that:
This impaired rewarming appears to be driven by:
Taken together, the study suggests that peripheral thermal recovery is the main vulnerability under acute hypoxia.
These results have relevant practical applications in high-altitude, sports science, and clinical contexts.
A hand that recovers temperature more slowly is more susceptible to cold-related tissue damage, especially during prolonged exposure.
Alpinists, skiers, trail runners, military personnel, and other individuals exposed to hypoxic conditions may benefit from thermal monitoring strategies.
Slower rewarming may serve as an early marker of hypoxia-induced vascular dysfunction, even when the cooling phase appears unaffected.
Thermography provides an objective, non-invasive, and detailed way to assess how the body redistributes blood flow in extreme environments.
The study demonstrates that:
These findings help explain why cold injuries are more frequent at altitude, where hypoxia adds an extra layer of physiological stress.
Infrared thermography emerges as a powerful tool to monitor these responses, enabling precise, fast, and non-invasive assessment of peripheral vascular behavior.
Keramidas, M. E., Kölegård, R., Mekjavic, I. B., & Eiken, O. (2014). Acute effects of normobaric hypoxia on hand-temperature responses during and after local cold stress. High Altitude Medicine & Biology, 15(2), 183-191.