Literature DB >> 2010387

Human initial responses to immersion in cold water at three temperatures and after hyperventilation.

M J Tipton1, D A Stubbs, D H Elliott.   

Abstract

The present investigation was designed to examine the influence of water temperature and prior hyperventilation on some of the potentially hazardous responses evoked by immersion in cold water. Eight naked subjects performed headout immersions of 2-min duration into stirred water at 5, 10, and 15 degrees C and at 10 degrees C after 1 min of voluntary hyperventilation. Analysis of the respiratory and cardiac data collected during consecutive 10-s periods showed that, at the 0.18-m/s rate of immersion employed, differences between the variables recorded on immersion in water at 5 and 10 degrees C were due to the duration of the responses evoked rather than their magnitude during the first 20 s. The exception to this was the tidal volume of subjects, which was higher on immersion in water at 15 degrees C than at 5 or 10 degrees C. The results suggested that the respiratory drive evoked during the first seconds of immersion was more closely reflected in the rate rather than the depth of breathing at this time. Hyperventilation before immersion in water at 10 degrees C did not attenuate the respiratory responses seen on immersion. It is concluded that, during the first critical seconds of immersion, the initial responses evoked by immersion in water at 10 degrees C can represent as great a threat as those in water at 5 degrees C; also, in water at 10 degrees C, the respiratory component of this threat is not influenced by the biochemical alterations associated with prior hyperventilation.

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Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 2010387     DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1991.70.1.317

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  14 in total

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4.  Cardiac output variations in supine resting subjects during head-out cold water immersion.

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Authors:  Akane Kurisu; Hisami Suga; Zdenek Prochazka; Kojiro Suzuki; Kazumasa Oguri; Tetsunori Inoue
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10.  Acute Anxiety Predicts Components of the Cold Shock Response on Cold Water Immersion: Toward an Integrated Psychophysiological Model of Acute Cold Water Survival.

Authors:  Martin J Barwood; Jo Corbett; Heather Massey; Terry McMorris; Mike Tipton; Christopher R D Wagstaff
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