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Habituation of the cold shock response: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Martin J. Barwood, Clare Eglin, Samuel P. Hills, Nicola Johnston, Heather Massey, Terry McMorris, Mike Tipton, Hitoshi Wakabayashi, Lisa Webster

2023Journal of Thermal Biology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cold water immersion (CWI) evokes the life-threatening reflex cold shock response (CSR), inducing hyperventilation, increasing cardiac arrhythmias, and increasing drowning risk by impairing safety behaviour. Repeated CWI induces CSR habituation (i.e., diminishing response with same stimulus magnitude) after ∼4 immersions, with variation between studies. We quantified the magnitude and coefficient of variation (CoV) in the CSR in a systematic review and meta-analysis with search terms entered to Medline, SportDiscus, PsychINFO, Pubmed, and Cochrane Central Register. Random effects meta-analyses, including effect sizes (Cohen's d) from 17 eligible groups (k), were conducted for heart rate (HR, n = 145, k = 17), respiratory frequency (fR, n = 73, k = 12), minute ventilation (Ve, n = 106, k = 10) and tidal volume (Vt, n = 46, k=6). All CSR variables habituated (p < 0.001) with large or moderate pooled effect sizes: ΔHR -14 (10) bt. min−1 (d: −1.19); ΔfR −8 (7) br. min−1 (d: −0.78); ΔVe, −21.3 (9.8) L. min−1 (d: −1.64); ΔVt −0.4 (0.3) L −1. Variation was greatest in Ve (control vs comparator immersion: 32.5&24.7%) compared to Vt (11.8&12.1%). Repeated CWI induces CSR habituation potentially reducing drowning risk. We consider the neurophysiological and behavioural consequences.

Topics & Concepts

HabituationMedicineHyperventilationMeta-analysisCoefficient of variationInternal medicineAudiologyAnesthesiaPsychologyChemistryChromatographyHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic ControlThermoregulation and physiological responsesClimate Change and Health Impacts
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