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Sudden cold water immersion

Respiration Physiology, 1975
Cold water is known to facilitate the drowning process. To gather information on the possible relationship between ventilation and cold stimuli, measurements of inspired and expired breath by breath ventilation and alveolar PCO2 were made on 8 male subjects suddenly immersed in both cold (11 degrees C) and warm water (28 degrees C).
James Duffin
exaly   +3 more sources

Cold Water Syncope

Southern Medical Journal, 1978
Cardiac bradyarrhythmias upon swallowing have been reported previously and most commonly have been related to esophageal abnormalities. We have reported the case of an unusual patient who experiences bradycardia and syncope only upon swallowing cold liquids.
J E, Brick, C M, Lowther, S M, Deglin
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Diver Performance in Cold Water

Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 1970
Twelve experienced divers repeatedly performed several representative underwater work tasks for 90-min. sessions at water temperatures of 50°, 60°, and 70° F. Time to complete the task was the primary performance measure; choice reaction time, with mental arithmetic as loading task, and four physiological measurements were also recorded.
P R, Stang, E L, Wiener
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Neardrowning and cold water immersion

Annals of Emergency Medicine, 1984
Though usually preventable, drowning remains a major cause of accidental death in our society. The lethal common denominator in drowning and neardrowning deaths is hypoxia. Aggressive treatment both at the scene and in the hospital is recommended even in those who initially appear lifeless.
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Hypothermia: Cold-Water Drowning

Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America, 1991
Cold-water submersion results in rapidly induced hypothermia. The body's physiologic response to this insult is, in some ways, similar to that of controlled hypothermia employed in the hospital setting, with the time sequencing being greatly enhanced.
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Immersion and Survival in Cold Water

Nature, 1950
A SURVEY of the results of experiments performed in baths1 suggests that few men would live in water near freezing point for more than 30 min. and none for more than 1½ hr. Yet some people derive much pleasure and no harm from brief immersions in such water, and shipwrecked people are known to have survived after spending several hours in icy seas ...
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Cold-Water Corals

2009
There are more coral species in deep, cold-waters than in tropical coral reefs. This broad-ranging treatment is the first to synthesise current understanding of all types of cold-water coral, covering their ecology, biology, palaeontology and geology. Beginning with a history of research in the field, the authors describe the approaches needed to study
Roberts, J. M.   +3 more
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