Spencer Sarah, Dickinson John, Forbes Lindsay
Centre for Health Services Studies, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NF, UK.
School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Kent, Chatham Maritime, ME4 4AT, UK.
Sports Med Open. 2018 Sep 20;4(1):43. doi: 10.1186/s40798-018-0158-8.
Swimming-induced pulmonary oedema (SIPE) can affect people with no underlying health problems, but may be life threatening and is poorly understood. The aim of this systematic review was to synthesise the evidence on SIPE incidence, prevalence, risk factors, short- and long-term outcomes, recurrence and effectiveness of interventions to prevent recurrences.
We carried out a literature search using bibliographic databases and reference lists. Risk of bias was assessed by adapting existing quality assessment tools including those developed by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute.
Nine studies met the inclusion criteria. Quantitative synthesis was not possible because of study heterogeneity. Five studies, which differed from each other in case definition, swimming environment, population characteristics and denominators, reported an incidence of 0.01% of UK triathlons raced over 5 years in unspecified swimming environments (one study, not fully reported, of men and women of unspecified age); 0.5% of river races swum over 3 days in Sweden (one study, of men and women up to the age of 70); and 1.8-26.7% of time trials in the sea around Israel (three studies of male teenage military trainees). One study reported that 1.4% of triathletes in the USA had experienced SIPE. One study found that hypertension, female sex, fish oil use, long course distance and another lower initial lung volumes and flows were risk factors for SIPE. A third study reported that higher mean pulmonary artery pressures and pulmonary artery wedge pressures, and lower tidal volumes were associated with SIPE. Three studies suggested that SIPE symptoms usually resolve within 24 h, although a restrictive deficit in lung function persisted for a week in one small study. We found no studies that reported deaths from SIPE. The single small study of longer-term outcomes reported no difference between affected and unaffected swimmers. Two studies suggested that around 30% of people report recurrences of SIPE. Two very small uncontrolled studies of the effect of sildenafil for recurrence prevention were inconclusive.
SIPE may be an important public health problem affecting the growing number of recreational open water swimmers. Further research should clarify the frequency of SIPE among recreational open water swimmers, confirm reported risk factors and explore others, explore long-term consequences and test interventions to prevent recurrences.
游泳诱发的肺水肿(SIPE)可影响无潜在健康问题的人群,但其可能危及生命且人们对此了解甚少。本系统评价的目的是综合关于SIPE的发病率、患病率、危险因素、短期和长期结局、复发情况以及预防复发干预措施有效性的证据。
我们使用文献数据库和参考文献列表进行文献检索。通过改编现有的质量评估工具(包括美国国立心肺血液研究所开发的工具)来评估偏倚风险。
九项研究符合纳入标准。由于研究的异质性,无法进行定量综合分析。五项研究在病例定义、游泳环境、人群特征和分母方面存在差异,报告了在未明确的游泳环境中,英国铁人三项赛5年内的发病率为0.01%(一项研究,未完全报告,涉及未明确年龄的男性和女性);瑞典3天内河流游泳比赛的发病率为0.5%(一项研究,涉及年龄最大70岁的男性和女性);以色列沿海时间赛的发病率为1.8% - 26.7%(三项针对男性青少年军事受训人员的研究)。一项研究报告称,美国1.4%的铁人三项运动员曾经历过SIPE。一项研究发现,高血压、女性、使用鱼油、长距离赛程以及另一项较低的初始肺容量和流量是SIPE的危险因素。第三项研究报告称,较高的平均肺动脉压和肺动脉楔压以及较低的潮气量与SIPE有关。三项研究表明,SIPE症状通常在24小时内缓解,尽管在一项小型研究中,肺功能的限制性缺陷持续了一周。我们未发现报告SIPE导致死亡的研究。关于长期结局的唯一一项小型研究报告称,受影响和未受影响的游泳者之间没有差异。两项研究表明,约30%的人报告SIPE复发。两项关于西地那非预防复发效果的非常小的非对照研究结果不明确。
SIPE可能是一个重要的公共卫生问题,影响着越来越多的休闲公开水域游泳者。进一步的研究应阐明休闲公开水域游泳者中SIPE的发生率,确认已报告的危险因素并探索其他因素,探索长期后果并测试预防复发的干预措施。