This is the final version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recordData availability statement: All data supporting the results of the paper are available as Supporting Information.NEW FINDINGS: What is the central question of this study? What is the effect of three repeated breath-hold techniques routinely used by freedivers, thought to manipulate arterial partial pressures of O2 and CO2 , on the cardiorespiratory and haematological response to breath-holding during facial immersion? What is the main finding and its importance? All three techniques increased breath-hold by a similar duration, probably owing to the similar marked increase in end-tidal O2 and decrease in end-tidal CO2 observed in all three trials before...
grantor: University of TorontoThe first part of the study examined the relationship betwee...
NEW FINDINGS: What is the central question of this study? Does facial cooling-mediated stimulation o...
Human breath-hold diving (free diving) has been gaining popularity as new individuals participate in...
Introduction: Acute apnea evokes bradycardia and peripheral vasoconstriction in order to conserve ox...
Background: Current research results indicate high adaptation of an organism to long-term apnoea. ...
Background: Submergence underwater activates the diving response (DR) in both diving mammals and hum...
Objective: Despite suggestions of a human dive response, a few studies > 50 years ago concurred t...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Experienced freedivers can endure prolonged breath-holds despite severe hypo...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Experienced freedivers can endure prolonged breath-holds despite severe hypo...
International audienceAim: Voluntary apnoea induces several physiological adaptations, including bra...
When a diving human holds his or her breath, the heart beat slows and the blood vessels constrict in...
peer-reviewedBreath-hold diving is an activity that humans have engaged in since antiquity to forage...
Acute breath-holding deprives the human body from oxygen. In an effort to protect the ...
Breath-hold divers (BHD) experience repeated bouts of severe hypoxia and hypercapnia with large incr...
S. Anderson, M. Chamberlain, S. Musgrove, A. Partusch, K. Tice and D.B. Thorp, PhD Gonzaga Universit...
grantor: University of TorontoThe first part of the study examined the relationship betwee...
NEW FINDINGS: What is the central question of this study? Does facial cooling-mediated stimulation o...
Human breath-hold diving (free diving) has been gaining popularity as new individuals participate in...
Introduction: Acute apnea evokes bradycardia and peripheral vasoconstriction in order to conserve ox...
Background: Current research results indicate high adaptation of an organism to long-term apnoea. ...
Background: Submergence underwater activates the diving response (DR) in both diving mammals and hum...
Objective: Despite suggestions of a human dive response, a few studies > 50 years ago concurred t...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Experienced freedivers can endure prolonged breath-holds despite severe hypo...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Experienced freedivers can endure prolonged breath-holds despite severe hypo...
International audienceAim: Voluntary apnoea induces several physiological adaptations, including bra...
When a diving human holds his or her breath, the heart beat slows and the blood vessels constrict in...
peer-reviewedBreath-hold diving is an activity that humans have engaged in since antiquity to forage...
Acute breath-holding deprives the human body from oxygen. In an effort to protect the ...
Breath-hold divers (BHD) experience repeated bouts of severe hypoxia and hypercapnia with large incr...
S. Anderson, M. Chamberlain, S. Musgrove, A. Partusch, K. Tice and D.B. Thorp, PhD Gonzaga Universit...
grantor: University of TorontoThe first part of the study examined the relationship betwee...
NEW FINDINGS: What is the central question of this study? Does facial cooling-mediated stimulation o...
Human breath-hold diving (free diving) has been gaining popularity as new individuals participate in...