Microparticle production, neutrophil activation, and intravascular bubbles following open-water SCUBA diving

Author:

Thom Stephen R.12,Milovanova Tatyana N.1,Bogush Marina1,Bhopale Veena M.1,Yang Ming1,Bushmann Kim3,Pollock Neal W.4,Ljubkovic Marko5,Denoble Petar4,Dujic Zeljko5

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Environmental Medicine,

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

3. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, San Diego, California;

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

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

Abstract

The goal of this study was to evaluate annexin V-positive microparticles (MPs) and neutrophil activation in humans following decompression from open-water SCUBA diving with the hypothesis that changes are related to intravascular bubble formation. Sixteen male volunteer divers followed a uniform profile of four daily SCUBA dives to 18 m of sea water for 47 min. Blood was obtained prior to and at 80 min following the first and fourth dives to evaluate the impact of repetitive diving, and intravascular bubbles were quantified by trans-thoracic echocardiography carried out at 20-min intervals for 2 h after each dive. MPs increased by 3.4-fold after each dive, neutrophil activation occurred as assessed by surface expression of myeloperoxidase and the CD18 component of β2-integrins, and there was an increased presence of the platelet-derived CD41 protein on the neutrophil surface indicating interactions with platelet membranes. Intravascular bubbles were detected in all divers. Surprisingly, significant inverse correlations were found among postdiving bubble scores and MPs, most consistently at 80 min or more after the dive on the fourth day. There were significant positive correlations between MPs and platelet-neutrophil interactions after the first dive and between platelet-neutrophil interactions and neutrophil activation documented as an elevation in β2-integrin expression after the fourth dive. We conclude that MPs- and neutrophil-related events in humans are consistent with findings in an animal decompression model. Whether there are causal relationships among bubbles, MPs, platelet-neutrophil interactions, and neutrophil activation remains obscure and requires additional study.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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