We measured heart rate (HR), stroke volume (SV), systemic arterial blood pressure (BP), and mean arterial pressure (MAP) in 7 healthy volunteers in response to face immersion in water with concomitant breath-holding at different lung volumes. The subjects were at rest in the prone position. During breath-holding at total lung capacity (TLC), baseline HR (70 to 75 beats/min) fell by 10% within fractions of a second, both in the control preimmersion state when the head was surrounded by room air, and when it was immersed in water of 33°C. This response was associated with rises in MAP and in SV. Immersion of the face in 10°C water while breath-holding, was associated with a strong, negative chronotropic effect (22% fall in HR), which developed within 10 s. Breath-holding at functional residual capacity (FRC) reduced HR substantially only in 10°C water, and in contrast to that at TLC, the response was slowly developing with a latency of 10-15 s. All these reductions in HR were significant and accompanied by increases in BP and MAP. The strong, negative chronotropic effect of cold water was typically linked to a rise in SV. The study identified two temporal components of HR reduction to face immersion: a fast parasympathetic response dependent on the input from the high pressure baroreceptors, and a late response mediated, in all likelihood, by sympathetic efferent activity. Facial receptors sensitive to cold seem to be vital in the largest responses observed. The fast response to breath-holding with the face in water of neutral temperature was equal to that in air. Thus “diving bradycardia” is in fact a basic survival response independent of water. © 1990, PHYSIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Paulev, P. E., Pokorski, M., Honda, Y., Ahn, B., Masuda, A., Kobayashi, T., … Nakamura, W. (1990). Facial Cold Receptors and the Survival Reflex “Diving Bradycardia” in Man. Japanese Journal of Physiology, 40(5), 701–712. https://doi.org/10.2170/jjphysiol.40.701
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