Cardiovascular and hematological responses to a dry dynamic apnea in breath hold divers

Courtney V. Brown, Alexander Patrician, Joshua C. Tremblay, L. Madden Brewster, Otto Barak, Ivan Drvis, Goran Dujic, Zeljko Dujic, Philip N. Ainslie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The mammalian dive reflex, characterized by bradycardia and peripheral vasoconstriction, occurs in all mammals, including humans, in response to apnea. However, the dive reflex to a single, maximal, dry, dynamic apnea (DYN) and how it compares to a time-matched exercise control trial (EX) or dry static apnea (SA) has not been studied. We examined the hypotheses that, compared with EX and SA, the magnitude of the 1) cardiovascular response and 2) hematological response to DYN would be greater. Cardiovascular parameters [heart rate (HR), systolic (SBP), diastolic (DBP), and mean arterial (MAP) blood pressure] were continuously collected in 23 (F ¼ 6 females) moderate and elite freedivers, first during a maximal DYN, then during a time-matched SA and EX on a swimming ergometer in randomized order. Venous blood draws were made before and following each trial. The change in calculated oxygen saturation (DYN: -17±13%, EX: -2±1%, DSA: -2±1%; P < 0.05, all comparisons) was greater during DYN compared with EX and SA. During DYN, DSBP (DYN: 104±31 mmHg; EX: 38±23 mmHg; and SA: 20±11 mmHg), DDBP (DYN: 45±12 mmHg; EX: 14±10 mmHg; and SA: 15±8 mmHg), and DMAP (DYN: 65±17 mmHg; EX: 22±13 mmHg; and SA: 16±9 mmHg) were increased compared with EX and SA, while DHR was greater during EX (DYN: -24±23 beats/min; EX: 33±13 beats/min; and SA: -1±10 beats/min) than either DYN or SA (P < 0.0001, all comparisons). Females had a greater pressor response to EX (DSBP: 59±30 mmHg; DDBP: 24±14 mmHg; and DMAP: 35±8 mmHg) than males (DSBP: 31±15 mmHg; DDBP: 11±6 mmHg; and DMAP: 18±8 mmHg; P < 0.01, all comparisons). Together, these data indicate that DYN elicits a distinct, exaggerated cardiovascular response compared with EX or SA alone. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study performed a dry dynamic apnea with sport-specific equipment to closely mimic the physiological demands of competition diving. We found the cardiovascular and hematological responses to dynamic apnea were more robust compared with time-matched exercise and dry static apnea control trials.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)R442-R456
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology - Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology
Volume327
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • apnea
  • diving physiology
  • human
  • hypoxia

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