Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function

The diving environment provides a challenge to the lung, including exposure to high ambient pressure, altered gas characteristics and cardiovascular effects on the pulmonary circulation. Several factors associated with diving affect pulmonary function acutely and can potentially cause prolonged effe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kay Tetzlaff, Paul S. Thomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Respiratory Society 2017-03-01
Series:European Respiratory Review
Online Access:http://err.ersjournals.com/content/26/143/160097.full
id doaj-3c7da8a0bc794d2aa2c6344dd32a789e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3c7da8a0bc794d2aa2c6344dd32a789e2020-11-25T01:50:36ZengEuropean Respiratory SocietyEuropean Respiratory Review0905-91801600-06172017-03-012614310.1183/16000617.0097-20160097-2016Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary functionKay Tetzlaff0Paul S. Thomas1 Dept of Sports Medicine, Medical Clinic, Eberhard-Karls-University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia The diving environment provides a challenge to the lung, including exposure to high ambient pressure, altered gas characteristics and cardiovascular effects on the pulmonary circulation. Several factors associated with diving affect pulmonary function acutely and can potentially cause prolonged effects that may accumulate gradually with repeated diving exposure. Evidence from experimental deep dives and longitudinal studies suggests long-term adverse effects of diving on the lungs in commercial deep divers, such as the development of small airways disease and accelerated loss of lung function. In addition, there is an accumulating body of evidence that diving with self-contained underwater breathing apparatus (scuba) may not be associated with deleterious effects on pulmonary function. Although changes in pulmonary function after single scuba dives have been found to be associated with immersion, ambient cold temperatures and decompression stress, changes in lung function were small and suggest a low likelihood of clinical significance. Recent evidence points to no accelerated loss of lung function in military or recreational scuba divers over time. Thus, the impact of diving on pulmonary function largely depends on factors associated with the individual diving exposure. However, in susceptible subjects clinically relevant worsening of lung function may occur even after single shallow-water scuba dives.http://err.ersjournals.com/content/26/143/160097.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kay Tetzlaff
Paul S. Thomas
spellingShingle Kay Tetzlaff
Paul S. Thomas
Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function
European Respiratory Review
author_facet Kay Tetzlaff
Paul S. Thomas
author_sort Kay Tetzlaff
title Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function
title_short Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function
title_full Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function
title_fullStr Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function
title_full_unstemmed Short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function
title_sort short- and long-term effects of diving on pulmonary function
publisher European Respiratory Society
series European Respiratory Review
issn 0905-9180
1600-0617
publishDate 2017-03-01
description The diving environment provides a challenge to the lung, including exposure to high ambient pressure, altered gas characteristics and cardiovascular effects on the pulmonary circulation. Several factors associated with diving affect pulmonary function acutely and can potentially cause prolonged effects that may accumulate gradually with repeated diving exposure. Evidence from experimental deep dives and longitudinal studies suggests long-term adverse effects of diving on the lungs in commercial deep divers, such as the development of small airways disease and accelerated loss of lung function. In addition, there is an accumulating body of evidence that diving with self-contained underwater breathing apparatus (scuba) may not be associated with deleterious effects on pulmonary function. Although changes in pulmonary function after single scuba dives have been found to be associated with immersion, ambient cold temperatures and decompression stress, changes in lung function were small and suggest a low likelihood of clinical significance. Recent evidence points to no accelerated loss of lung function in military or recreational scuba divers over time. Thus, the impact of diving on pulmonary function largely depends on factors associated with the individual diving exposure. However, in susceptible subjects clinically relevant worsening of lung function may occur even after single shallow-water scuba dives.
url http://err.ersjournals.com/content/26/143/160097.full
work_keys_str_mv AT kaytetzlaff shortandlongtermeffectsofdivingonpulmonaryfunction
AT paulsthomas shortandlongtermeffectsofdivingonpulmonaryfunction
_version_ 1725000896902856704