4.6 Article

Diving Responses in Experienced Rebreather Divers: Short-Term Heart Rate Variability in Cold Water Diving

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2021.649319

Keywords

HRV; cold diving; Arctic diving; diving response; rebreather diving; diving reflex; technical diving

Categories

Funding

  1. Finnish Defense Forces Center of Military Medicine
  2. Finnish Society of Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine (Suomen sukellus-ja ylipainelaaketieteellinen yhdistys ry)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Our study suggests that the trigeminocardiac part of the diving reflex leads to strong initial PNS activation at the beginning of the dive, but the reaction diminishes quickly. Cold water appears to be the primary factor promoting PNS activity, rather than pressure. Additionally, our findings indicate a simultaneous increase in both SNS and PNS branches, which is associated with a higher risk of arrhythmia. Therefore, we recommend a brief adaptation phase before engaging in physical activity in cold-water diving.
Introduction Technical diving is very popular in Finland throughout the year despite diving conditions being challenging, especially due to arctic water and poor visibility. Cold water, immersion, submersion, hyperoxia, as well as psychological and physiological stress, all have an effect on the autonomic nervous system (ANS). Materials and methods To evaluate divers' ANS responses, short-term (5 min) heart rate variability (HRV) during dives in 2-4 degrees C water was measured. HRV resting values were evaluated from separate measurements before and after the dives. Twenty-six experienced closed circuit rebreather (CCR) divers performed an identical 45-meter decompression dive with a non-physical task requiring concentration at the bottom depth. Results Activity of the ANS branches was evaluated with the parasympathetic (PNS) and sympathetic (SNS) indexes of the Kubios HRV Standard program. Compared to resting values, PNS activity decreased significantly on immersion with face out of water. From immersion, it increased significantly with facial immersion, just before decompression and just before surfacing. Compared to resting values, SNS activity increased significantly on immersion with face out of water. Face in water and submersion measures did not differ from the immersion measure. After these measurements, SNS activity decreased significantly over time. Conclusion Our study indicates that the trigeminocardiac part of the diving reflex causes the strong initial PNS activation at the beginning of the dive but the reaction seems to decrease quickly. After this initial activation, cold seemed to be the most prominent promoter of PNS activity - not pressure. Also, our study showed a concurrent increase in both SNS and PNS branches, which has been associated with an elevated risk for arrhythmia. Therefore, we recommend a short adaptation phase at the beginning of cold-water diving before physical activity.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available