Increased spleen volume provoked by temperate head-out-of-water immersion

Author:

Keeler Jason M.1ORCID,Hess Hayden W.1ORCID,Tourula Erica1,Baker Tyler B.1,Kerr Payton M.1,Greenshields Joel T.1,Chapman Robert F.1,Johnson Blair D.1ORCID,Schlader Zachary J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. H. H. Morris Human Performance Laboratories, Department of Kinesiology, School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana

Abstract

This study tested the hypotheses that 1) spleen volume increases during head-out-of-water immersion (HOWI) and returns to pre-HOWI values postdiuresis, and 2) the magnitude of apnea-induced spleen contraction increases when preapnea spleen volume is elevated. Spleen volume was measured before and after a set of five apneas in 12 healthy adults (28 ± 5 yr, 3 females) before, during (at 30 and 150 min), and 20 min after temperate temperature (36 ± 1°C) HOWI. At each time point, spleen length, width, and thickness were measured via ultrasound, and spleen volume was calculated using the Pilström equation. Compared with pre-HOWI (276 ± 88 mL), spleen volume was elevated at 30 (353 ± 94 mL, P < 0.01) and 150 (322 ± 87 mL, P < 0.01) min of HOWI but returned to pre-HOWI volume at post-HOWI (281 ± 90 mL, P = 0.58). Spleen volume decreased from pre- to postapnea bouts at each time point ( P < 0.01). The magnitude of reduction in spleen volume from pre- to postapneas was elevated at 30 min of HOWI (−69 ± 24 mL) compared with pre-HOWI (−52 ± 20 mL, P = 0.04) but did not differ from pre-HOWI at 150 min of HOWI (−54 ± 16 mL, P = 0.99) and post-HOWI (−50 ± 18 mL, P = 0.87). Thus, spleen volume is increased throughout 180 min of HOWI, and whereas apnea-induced spleen contraction is augmented after 30 min of HOWI, the magnitude of spleen contraction is unaffected by HOWI thereafter.

Funder

DOD | USN | Office of Naval Research

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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