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Science 29 November 1968:
Vol. 162. no. 3857, pp. 1020 - 1023
DOI: 10.1126/science.162.3857.1020

Articles

Pulmonary and Circulatory Adjustments Determining the Limits of Depths in Breathhold Diving

Karl E. Schaefer 1, Robert D. Allison 1, James H. Dougherty Jr. 1, Charles R. Carey 1, Roger Walker 1, Frank Yost 1, and Donald Parker 1

1 Submarine Medical Research Laboratory, Groton., Connecticut, Scott and White Clinic, Temple, Texas, and Department of Anesthesiology, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida

Data on pulmonary gas exchange were collected in breathhold dives to 90 feet in a tank and in open-sea breathhold dives to depths of 217.5 and 225 feet. Thoracic blood volume displacements were measured at depths of 25, 50, 90, and 130 feet, by use of the impedance plethysmograph. The open-sea dives were carried out with an average speed of descent of 3.95 feet per second and an average rate of ascent of 3.50 feet per second. End-dive alveolar oxygen tensions did not fall below 36 millimeters of mercury, while alveolar carbon dioxide tension did not rise above 40 millimeters of mercury except in one case. These findings indicate that for diver Croft, who has unusual lung capacity, neither hypoxia nor hypercapnia determined the depth limits under those conditions. At depths of 90 and 130 feet blood was forced into the thorax, amounting to 1047 and 850 milliliters respectively.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Pulmonary edema and hemoptysis after breath-hold diving at residual volume.
P. Lindholm, A. Ekborn, D. Oberg, and M. Gennser (2008)
J Appl Physiol 104, 912-917
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »
Pulmonary edema after competitive breath-hold diving.
M. H. Liner and J. P. A. Andersson (2008)
J Appl Physiol 104, 986-990
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »
Respiration and Deep Diving in the Bottlenose Porpoise.
S. H. Ridgway, B. L. Scronce, and J. Kanwisher (1969)
Science 166, 1651-1654
   Abstract »    PDF »



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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)