Sherman D, Eilender E, Shefer A, Kerem D
Undersea Biomed Res. 1980 Mar;7(1):61-74.
Ventilatory (VE/PCO2) and occlusion-pressure (P0.1/PCO2) responses to progressive hypercapnia (rebreathing method of Read (1)) were estimated in 20 normal subjects and 22 scuba divers. Indexes of CO2 sensitivity (slopes of response curves) and absolute response values under strong CO2 drive (PCO2 = 60 mmHg) were significantly lower in the diver group. Individual CO2 sensitivity did not correlate with either diving experience or current diving activity. Positively skewed (log-normal) frequency distribution curves of individual CO2 sensitivities were drawn for the divers and for a larger sample of normal controls (using data from other studies). All divers' values fell in the lower range of non-diver control values and about one-third were below the normal range (mean +/- 2 SD) for CO2 sensitivity. We concluded that our divers did not represent a distinct population different from the normal one but rather a group of normal healthy subjects with either an inherent or acquired relatively low CO2 response. The rebreathing technique is strongly advocated as a tool for investigating divers' CO2 sensitivity and its implications in underwater environments.
在20名正常受试者和22名潜水员中,评估了对渐进性高碳酸血症(采用Read(1)的重复呼吸法)的通气反应(VE/PCO2)和阻断压反应(P0.1/PCO2)。潜水员组的二氧化碳敏感性指标(反应曲线斜率)和在强二氧化碳驱动下(PCO2 = 60 mmHg)的绝对反应值显著较低。个体二氧化碳敏感性与潜水经验或当前潜水活动均无相关性。为潜水员和更大样本的正常对照绘制了个体二氧化碳敏感性的正偏态(对数正态)频率分布曲线(使用其他研究的数据)。所有潜水员的值都落在非潜水员对照值的较低范围内,约三分之一低于二氧化碳敏感性的正常范围(均值±2标准差)。我们得出结论,我们研究的潜水员并非与正常人群不同的独特群体,而是一群固有或后天获得相对较低二氧化碳反应的正常健康受试者。强烈提倡将重复呼吸技术作为研究潜水员二氧化碳敏感性及其在水下环境中影响的一种工具。