Arterial and intraocular pressure changes after a single-session hot-water immersion

作者:Findikoglu Gulin*; Cetin Ebru Nevin; Sarsan Ayse; Senol Hande; Yildirim Cem; Ardic Fusun
来源:Undersea & Hyperbaric Medicine, 2015, 42(1): 65-73.

摘要

Background/Aims: The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of head-out hot-water immersion on the intraocular pressure (10P) of healthy subjects and investigate whether this intervention alters cardiovascular and microcirculatory responses.
Methods: 16 male and 18 female healthy young adults were immersed in 39 degrees C water up to shoulder level for 20 minutes. Blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR) and IOP were measured pre-immersion, post-immersion and five minutes after immersion on the same day. Tono-Pen was used to measure IOP. Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), systolic pressure rate product (S-PRP), diastolic pressure rate product (D-PRP), pulse pressure (PP), mean ocular perfusion pressure (mean-OPP), systolic ocular perfusion pressure (S-OPP) and diastolic ocular perfusion pressure (D-OPP) were calculated.
Results: Systolic BP (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP), MAP, IOP, S-OPP, D-OPP and mean-OPP decreased; HR increased five minutes after immersion in the pool and post-immersion out of the pool significantly, compared to pre-immersion data (p<0.05). HR, S-PRP and D-PRP measured five minutes after immersion were significantly higher from post-immersion (p<0.05). PP and S-OPP were significantly different five minutes after immersion compared to pre-immersion. There was no statistically significant correlation between IOP and SBP, DBP, MAP, S-PRP, D-PRP, PP, S-OPP, D-OPP, or mean-OPP (p>0.05).
Conclusions: Physiological hemodynamic response to single head-out hot-water immersion caused a statistically significant decrease in IOP. Preliminary results could help to clarify vascular reactions and IOP changes during hot-water immersion that might be potentially therapeutic in glaucoma patients.

  • 出版日期2015-2