# Case report: Biphasic autonomic response in decompression sickness: HRV and sinoatrial findings

**Authors:** Gerald Schmitz

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2025.1605779 · Frontiers in Physiology · 2025-04-29

## TL;DR

This case report describes a diver with decompression sickness who showed unusual heart rate patterns, revealing a two-phase autonomic nervous system response.

## Contribution

The study introduces advanced HRV analysis to reveal autonomic disturbances in DCS not detectable with traditional methods.

## Key findings

- Initial parasympathetic dominance was observed during hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
- Post-treatment, a shift to sympathovagal imbalance and reduced long-range autonomic integration was detected.
- Nonlinear HRV analysis revealed autonomic regulatory disturbances not captured by conventional metrics.

## Abstract

Decompression sickness (DCS) may involve neurological and cardiovascular systems, but cardiac autonomic dysfunction is rarely documented. Heart rate variability (HRV) can provide insight into autonomic modulation in such cases, particularly when incorporating advanced nonlinear and dynamic techniques.

We present a 35-year-old recreational diver who developed neurological DCS and persistent bradycardia following multiple consecutive dives. Neurological symptoms resolved with hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT), but bradyarrhythmias persisted, prompting continuous monitoring.

HRV was assessed using time-domain, frequency-domain, nonlinear, and dynamic analyses during HBOT and over two 24-h Holter recordings. Principal Dynamic Mode (PDM) analysis was employed to characterize autonomic control dynamics beyond conventional spectral markers.

During HBOT, the patient exhibited pronounced parasympathetic activity (RMSSD: 243 m; HF power: 8,656 m2; SD1: 172 m). Post-treatment, a shift toward sympathovagal imbalance was observed, with the LF/HF ratio rising from 1.53 to 3.80. Despite high total HRV power (38,549 m2 during HBOT), SD1/SD2 ratio declined from 0.52 to 0.12, suggesting selective vagal withdrawal. PDM analysis showed a low PDM2/PDM1 ratio (0.42), consistent with preserved beat-to-beat vagal responsiveness but impaired long-range autonomic integration.

This case illustrates a biphasic autonomic pattern in DCS—initial parasympathetic dominance followed by sympathetic tilt and desynchronization. Advanced nonlinear and dynamic HRV analysis revealed regulatory disturbances not captured by traditional methods, supporting its role in post-dive assessment and autonomic monitoring.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** decompression sickness (MONDO:0020797)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bradyarrhythmias (MESH:D001919), DCS (MESH:D003665), cardiac autonomic dysfunction (MESH:D006331)
- **Chemicals:** oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

27 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12069374/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12069374