Oxygen-enriched Air Decreases Ventilation during High-intensity Fin-swimming Underwater

Author:

Möller Fabian1ORCID,Jacobi Elena1,Hoffmann Uwe1,Muth Thomas2,Schipke Jochen D.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Exercise Physiology, German Sport University Cologne, Cologne, Germany

2. Occupational, Social, Environmental Medicine, Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf, Dusseldorf, Germany

3. Research Group Experimenal Surgery, University Hospital Düsseldorf, Dusseldorf, Germany

Abstract

AbstractOxygen-enriched air is commonly used in the sport of SCUBA-diving and might affect ventilation and heart rate, but little work exists for applied diving settings. We hypothesized that ventilation is decreased especially during strenuous underwater fin-swimming when using oxygen-enriched air as breathing gas. Ten physically-fit divers (age: 25±4; 5 females; 67±113 open-water dives) performed incremental underwater fin-swimming until exhaustion at 4 m water depth with either normal air or oxygen-enriched air (40% O2) in a double-blind, randomized within-subject design. Heart rate and ventilation were measured throughout the dive and maximum whole blood lactate samples were determined post-exercise. ANOVAs showed a significant effect for the factor breathing gas (F(1, 9)=7.52; P=0.023; η2 p=0.455), with a lower ventilation for oxygen-enriched air during fin-swimming velocities of 0.6 m·s−1 (P=0.032) and 0.8 m·s−1 (P=0.037). Heart rate, lactate, and time to exhaustion showed no significant differences. These findings indicate decreased ventilation by an elevated oxygen fraction in the breathing gas when fin-swimming in shallow-water submersion with high velocity (>0.5 m·s−1). Applications are within involuntary underwater exercise or rescue scenarios for all dives with limited gas supply.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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