Center for Heart, Lung, and Vascular Health, School of Health and Exercise Sciences, University of British Columbia Okanagan, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.
Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2021 May 1;130(5):1345-1350. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00877.2020. Epub 2021 Feb 18.
In this case study, we evaluate the unique physiological profiles of two world-champion breath-hold divers. At close to current world-record depths, the extreme physiological responses to both exercise and asphyxia during progressive elevations in hydrostatic pressure are profound. As such, these professional athletes must be capable of managing such stress, to maintain performing at the forefront human capacity. In both divers, pulmonary function before and after deep dives to 102 m and 117 m in the open sea was assessed using noninvasive pulmonary gas exchange (indexed via the O deficit, which is analogous to the traditional alveolar to arterial oxygen difference), ultrasound B-line scores, airway resistance, and airway reactance. Hydrostatic-induced lung compression was also quantified via spirometry. Both divers successfully performed their dives. Pulmonary gas exchange efficiency was impaired in both divers at 10 min but had mostly restored within a few hours. Mild hemoptysis was transiently evident immediately following the 117-m dive, whereas both divers experienced nitrogen narcosis. Although B-lines were only elevated in one diver postdive, reductions in airway resistance and reactance occurred in both divers, suggesting that the compressive strain on the structural characteristics of the airways can persist for up to 3.5 h. Marked echocardiographic dyssynchrony was evident in one diver after 10 m of descent, which persisted until resolving at ∼77 m during ascent. In summary, despite the enormous hydrostatic and physiological stress to diving beyond 100 m on a single breath, these data provide valuable insight into the extraordinary capacity of those at the pinnacle of apneic performance. This study shows that world-champion breath-hold divers demonstrate incredible tolerability to extreme levels of hydrostatic-induced lung compression. Immediately following dives to >100 m, there were acute impairments in pulmonary gas exchange efficiency, mild accummulation of extravascular lung fluid, noticable intrathoracic discomfort, and evident nitrogen narcosis, however, within a few hours, these had all mostly resolved.
在本案例研究中,我们评估了两位世界冠军闭气潜水员的独特生理特征。在接近当前世界纪录深度的情况下,随着静水压力的逐渐升高,运动和窒息引起的极端生理反应非常深刻。因此,这些专业运动员必须能够应对这种压力,以保持在人类能力的前沿表现。在两名潜水员中,使用非侵入性肺气体交换(通过 O 缺乏来索引,类似于传统的肺泡-动脉氧差)、超声 B 线评分、气道阻力和气道电抗评估了他们在开放海域中深潜至 102 米和 117 米后的肺功能。还通过肺活量测定法量化了静水压力引起的肺压缩。两名潜水员都成功完成了潜水。在 10 分钟时,两名潜水员的肺气体交换效率都受损,但在数小时内大部分都恢复了。在 117 米潜水后立即出现短暂的轻度咯血,而两名潜水员都经历了氮麻醉。尽管只有一名潜水员在潜水后 B 线升高,但两名潜水员的气道阻力和电抗都降低,表明气道结构特征的压缩应变可持续长达 3.5 小时。一名潜水员在下降 10 米后出现明显的超声心动图不同步,直到在上升过程中在约 77 米处解决。总之,尽管在单次呼吸下潜水超过 100 米会承受巨大的静水压力和生理压力,但这些数据为那些在窒息表现巅峰的人的非凡能力提供了宝贵的见解。这项研究表明,世界冠军闭气潜水员对极端水平的静水压力引起的肺压缩具有令人难以置信的耐受性。在 100 米以上的潜水后,立即出现肺气体交换效率急性受损、肺血管外液体轻度积聚、明显的胸腔不适和明显的氮麻醉,但在数小时内,这些大多都得到了缓解。