Carotid body chemosensitivity is not attenuated during cold water diving
Abstract
Introduction: Tonic carotid body (CB) activity is reduced during exposure to cold and hyperoxia. We tested the hypotheses that cold water diving lowers CB chemosensitivity and augments CO2 retention more than thermoneutral diving. Methods: Thirteen subjects (age: 26±4 y; BMI: 26±2 kg/m2) completed two, four-hour head out water immersion protocols in a hyperbaric chamber (1.6 ATA) in cold (15°C) and thermoneutral (25°C) water. CB chemosensitivity was assessed using brief hypercapnic ventilatory response (CBCO2) and hypoxic ventilatory response (CBO2) tests pre-dive, 80 and 160 min into the dives (D80 and D160, respectively), immediately following and 60 min post-dive. Data are reported as an absolute mean (SD) change from pre-dive. Results: End-tidal CO2 pressure increased during both the thermoneutral water dive (D160: +2(3) mmHg; p=0.02) and cold water dive (D160: +1(2) mmHg; p=0.03). Ventilationincreased during the cold water dive (D80: 4.13(4.38) and D160: 7.75(5.23) L·min-1; both pCO2 was unchanged during the dive (p=0.24) and was not different between conditions (p=0.23). CBO2 decreased during the thermonutral water dive (D80: -3.45(3.61) and D160: -2.76(4.04) L·min·mmHg-1; pO2 was not different between conditions (p=0.17). Conclusion: CB chemosensitivity was not attenuated during the cold stress diving condition and does not appear to contribute to changes in ventilation or CO2 retention.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Jun 16, 2021
- Source ID
- 10.1152/ajpregu.00202.2020
Entities
People
- Blair D Johnson
- Brian M. Clemency
- David Hostler
- Erika St. James
- Hayden W Hess
Organizations
- Indiana University
- National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
- Office of Naval Research
- University at Buffalo