Bubbles, microparticles, and neutrophil activation: changes with exercise level and breathing gas during open-water SCUBA diving

Author:

Thom Stephen R.12,Milovanova Tatyana N.1,Bogush Marina1,Yang Ming1,Bhopale Veena M.1,Pollock Neal W.3,Ljubkovic Marko4,Denoble Petar3,Madden Dennis4,Lozo Mislav4,Dujic Zeljko4

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Environmental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;

2. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;

3. Divers Alert Network, Durham, North Carolina; and

4. Department of Integrative Physiology, University of Split School of Medicine, Split, Croatia

Abstract

The study goal was to evaluate responses in humans following decompression from open-water SCUBA diving with the hypothesis that exertion underwater and use of a breathing mixture containing more oxygen and less nitrogen (enriched air nitrox) would alter annexin V-positive microparticle (MP) production and size changes and neutrophil activation, as well as their relationships to intravascular bubble formation. Twenty-four divers followed a uniform dive profile to 18 m of sea water breathing air or 22.5 m breathing 32% oxygen/68% nitrogen for 47 min, either swimming with moderately heavy exertion underwater or remaining stationary at depth. Blood was obtained pre- and at 15 and 120 min postdive. Intravascular bubbles were quantified by transthoracic echocardiography postdive at 20-min intervals for 2 h. There were no significant differences in maximum bubble scores among the dives. MP number increased 2.7-fold, on average, within 15 min after each dive; only the air-exertion dive resulted in a significant further increase to 5-fold over baseline at 2 h postdive. Neutrophil activation occurred after all dives. For the enriched air nitrox stationary at depth dive, but not for other conditions, the numbers of postdive annexin V-positive particles above 1 μm in diameter were correlated with intravascular bubble scores (correlation coefficients ∼0.9, P < 0.05). We conclude that postdecompression relationships among bubbles, MPs, platelet-neutrophil interactions, and neutrophil activation appear to exist, but more study is required to improve confidence in the associations.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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