Cardiovascular response to cooling of limbs determined by noninvasive methods
- 1 June 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in European Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 44 (1) , 67-75
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00421765
Abstract
Cold, even local exposure to a limited portion of the body, is a stress to man which elevates arterial pressure, thereby intensifying cardiac workload. The sequence of cardiac events following local cooling was noninvasively studied by observation of changes in cardiac interval, left ventricular ejection time, time from Q wave of electrocardiogram to the peak of the dD/dt of the carotid pulse wave (which includes pre-ejection period), and amplitude of the pulse wave from a photoelectric cell on the earlobe, along with arterial pressures. Twelve subjects, aged 22–41 years, exposed a hand or foot to cold water for 1 min while seated and while supine (four experiments each). Results indicate that arterial pressure is monotonically elevated throughout the minute of exposure. Cardiac intervals are initially abbreviated, then return towards control. This may indicate an initial response to the cold, followed by a baroreflex at the heart. Subject posture and limb exposed also affect cardiac responses.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- SYSTOLIC-TIME INTERVALS DURING COMBINED HAND COOLING AND HEAD-UP TILT1979
- Effects of age, sex, and physical fitness on responses to local coolingJournal of Applied Physiology, 1978
- Semiautomated processing of systolic time intervalsJournal of Applied Physiology, 1976
- Some Factors Influencing the Vasomotor Response to Cold Pressor StimulationPsychophysiology, 1975
- The Cold Pressor Test and Autonomic Function: A Review and IntegrationPsychophysiology, 1975
- Autonomic Arousal in Normal, Alcoholic, and Brain‐Damaged Subjects as Measured by the Plethysmograph Response to Cold Pressor StimulationPsychophysiology, 1973
- Bedside technics for the evaluation of ventricular function in manThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1969
- THE LAW OF INITIAL VALUE IN THE LONGITUDINAL STUDY OF AUTONOMIC CONSTITUTION: REPRODUCIBILITY OF AUTONOMIC RESPONSES AND RESPONSE PATTERNS OVER A FOUR‐YEAR INTERVAL*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1962
- The Changes in the Intra-Arterial Pressure during Immersion of the Hand in Ice-Cold WaterCirculation, 1955
- The significance of vascular hyperreaction as measured by the cold-pressor testAmerican Heart Journal, 1940