Cardiovascular changes during underwater static and dynamic breath-hold dives in trained divers

Author:

Breskovic Toni1,Uglesic Lovro1,Zubin Petra1,Kuch Benjamin2,Kraljevic Jasenka1,Zanchi Jaksa3,Ljubkovic Marko1,Sieber Arne4,Dujic Zeljko1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Integrative Physiology, University of Split School of Medicine, Split, Croatia;

2. Real-Time Systems Laboratory, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy;

3. Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital Split, Split, Croatia; and

4. The Imego Institute, Gothenburg, Sweden

Abstract

Limited information exists concerning arterial blood pressure (BP) changes in underwater breath-hold diving. Simulated chamber dives to 50 m of freshwater (mfw) reported very high levels of invasive BP in two divers during static apnea (SA), whereas a recent study using a noninvasive subaquatic sphygmomanometer reported unchanged or mildly increased values at 10 m SA dive. In this study we investigated underwater BP changes during not only SA but, for the first time, dynamic apnea (DA) and shortened (SHT) DA in 16 trained breath-hold divers. Measurements included BP (subaquatic sphygmomanometer), ECG, and pulse oxymetry (arterial oxygen saturation, SpO2, and heart rate). BP was measured during dry conditions, at surface fully immersed (SA), and at 2 mfw (DA and SHT DA), whereas ECG and pulse oxymetry were measured continuously. We have found significantly higher mean arterial pressure (MAP) values in SA (∼40%) vs. SHT DA (∼30%). Postapneic recovery of BP was slightly slower after SHT DA. Significantly higher BP gain (mmHg/duration of apnea in s) was found in SHT DA vs. SA. Furthermore, DA attempts resulted in faster desaturation vs. SA. In conclusion, we have found moderate increases in BP during SA, DA, and SHT DA. These cardiovascular changes during immersed SA and DA are in agreement with those reported for dry SA and DA.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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