Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume. / Patrician, Alexander; Spajić, Boris; Gasho, Christopher et al.
In: Experimental Physiology, Vol. 106, No. 4, 04.2021, p. 1120-1133.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Patrician, A, Spajić, B, Gasho, C, Caldwell, HG, Dawkins, T, Stembridge, M, Lovering, AT, Coombs, GB, Howe, CA, Barak, O, Drviš, I, Dujić, Ž & Ainslie, PN 2021, 'Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume', Experimental Physiology, vol. 106, no. 4, pp. 1120-1133. https://doi.org/10.1113/EP089176

APA

Patrician, A., Spajić, B., Gasho, C., Caldwell, H. G., Dawkins, T., Stembridge, M., Lovering, A. T., Coombs, G. B., Howe, C. A., Barak, O., Drviš, I., Dujić, Ž., & Ainslie, P. N. (2021). Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume. Experimental Physiology, 106(4), 1120-1133. https://doi.org/10.1113/EP089176

CBE

Patrician A, Spajić B, Gasho C, Caldwell HG, Dawkins T, Stembridge M, Lovering AT, Coombs GB, Howe CA, Barak O, et al. 2021. Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume. Experimental Physiology. 106(4):1120-1133. https://doi.org/10.1113/EP089176

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Patrician A, Spajić B, Gasho C, Caldwell HG, Dawkins T, Stembridge M et al. Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume. Experimental Physiology. 2021 Apr;106(4):1120-1133. doi: 10.1113/EP089176

Author

Patrician, Alexander ; Spajić, Boris ; Gasho, Christopher et al. / Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume. In: Experimental Physiology. 2021 ; Vol. 106, No. 4. pp. 1120-1133.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Temporal changes in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency when breath-hold diving below residual volume

AU - Patrician, Alexander

AU - Spajić, Boris

AU - Gasho, Christopher

AU - Caldwell, Hannah G

AU - Dawkins, Tony

AU - Stembridge, Michael

AU - Lovering, Andrew T

AU - Coombs, Geoff B

AU - Howe, Connor A

AU - Barak, Otto

AU - Drviš, Ivan

AU - Dujić, Željko

AU - Ainslie, Philip N

N1 - © 2021 The Authors. Experimental Physiology © 2021 The Physiological Society.

PY - 2021/4

Y1 - 2021/4

N2 - NEW FINDINGS: What is the central question of this study? How does deep breath-hold diving impact cardiopulmonary function, both acutely and over the subsequent 2.5 hours post-dive? What is the main finding and its importance? Breath-hold diving, to depths below residual volume, is associated with acute impairments in pulmonary gas exchange, which typically resolve within 2.5 hours. These data provide new insight into the behaviour of the lungs and pulmonary vasculature following deep diving.ABSTRACT: Breath-hold diving involves highly integrative and extreme physiological responses to both exercise and asphyxia during progressive elevations in hydrostatic pressure. Over two diving training camps (Study 1 and 2), 25 breath-hold divers (recreational to world-champion) performed 66 dives to 57 ± 20 m (range: 18-117 m). Using the deepest dive from each diver, temporal changes in cardiopulmonary function were assessed using non-invasive pulmonary gas exchange (indexed via the O2 deficit), ultrasound B-line scores, lung compliance and pulmonary haemodynamics at baseline and following the dive. Hydrostatically induced lung compression was quantified in Study 2, using spirometry and lung volume measurement, enabling each dive to be categorized by its residual volume (RV)-equivalent depth. From both studies, pulmonary gas exchange inefficiency - defined as an increase in O2 deficit - was related to the depth of the dive (r2 = 0.345; P < 0.001), with dives associated with lung squeeze symptoms exhibiting the greatest deficits. In Study 1, although B-lines doubled from baseline (P = 0.027), cardiac output and pulmonary artery systolic pressure were unchanged post-dive. In Study 2, dives with lung compression to ≤RV had higher O2 deficits at 9 min, compared to dives that did not exceed RV (24 ± 25 vs. 5 ± 8 mmHg; P = 0.021). The physiological significance of a small increase in estimated lung compliance post-dive (via decreased and increased/unaltered airway resistance and reactance, respectively) remains equivocal. Following deep dives, the current study highlights an integrated link between hydrostatically induced lung compression and transient impairments in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency.

AB - NEW FINDINGS: What is the central question of this study? How does deep breath-hold diving impact cardiopulmonary function, both acutely and over the subsequent 2.5 hours post-dive? What is the main finding and its importance? Breath-hold diving, to depths below residual volume, is associated with acute impairments in pulmonary gas exchange, which typically resolve within 2.5 hours. These data provide new insight into the behaviour of the lungs and pulmonary vasculature following deep diving.ABSTRACT: Breath-hold diving involves highly integrative and extreme physiological responses to both exercise and asphyxia during progressive elevations in hydrostatic pressure. Over two diving training camps (Study 1 and 2), 25 breath-hold divers (recreational to world-champion) performed 66 dives to 57 ± 20 m (range: 18-117 m). Using the deepest dive from each diver, temporal changes in cardiopulmonary function were assessed using non-invasive pulmonary gas exchange (indexed via the O2 deficit), ultrasound B-line scores, lung compliance and pulmonary haemodynamics at baseline and following the dive. Hydrostatically induced lung compression was quantified in Study 2, using spirometry and lung volume measurement, enabling each dive to be categorized by its residual volume (RV)-equivalent depth. From both studies, pulmonary gas exchange inefficiency - defined as an increase in O2 deficit - was related to the depth of the dive (r2 = 0.345; P < 0.001), with dives associated with lung squeeze symptoms exhibiting the greatest deficits. In Study 1, although B-lines doubled from baseline (P = 0.027), cardiac output and pulmonary artery systolic pressure were unchanged post-dive. In Study 2, dives with lung compression to ≤RV had higher O2 deficits at 9 min, compared to dives that did not exceed RV (24 ± 25 vs. 5 ± 8 mmHg; P = 0.021). The physiological significance of a small increase in estimated lung compliance post-dive (via decreased and increased/unaltered airway resistance and reactance, respectively) remains equivocal. Following deep dives, the current study highlights an integrated link between hydrostatically induced lung compression and transient impairments in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency.

KW - Breath Holding

KW - Cardiac Output

KW - Pulmonary Gas Exchange

KW - Residual Volume

KW - Spirometry

U2 - 10.1113/EP089176

DO - 10.1113/EP089176

M3 - Article

C2 - 33559974

VL - 106

SP - 1120

EP - 1133

JO - Experimental Physiology

JF - Experimental Physiology

SN - 0958-0670

IS - 4

ER -