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Scuba Diving Physiology

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Last Update: October 10, 2022.

Definition/Introduction

Self-contained underwater breathing apparatus (SCUBA) diving was introduced to the world by Jacques-Yves Cousteau. In 1942, he, along with Emile Gagnan, developed the demand valve system that led to modern regulators. However, it was scientific research advanced by the work of Paul Bert and John Scott Haldane, from France and Scotland, respectively, that helped explain the effects of water pressure on the body and also defined safe limits for compressed air diving. Cousteau became famous by following these rules, surviving while many others before him died while diving. Much earlier in 1825, the "first workable, full-time SCUBA" was invented by an Englishman, William James. It incorporates a cylindrical belt around the diver's trunk that serves as an air reservoir at 450 psi. Air delivery to the diver was by turning a valve on and off as needed.

Today, there are 2 principal types of SCUBA: open and closed circuits. Open-circuit vents all expired gas into the water and is the mode used predominately in recreational diving. Closed-circuit systems, in which exhaled gas is rebreathed after carbon dioxide is absorbed and oxygen added, were widely used before open circuits became available, particularly by military divers who wished to avoid showing any air bubbles. Herein, we cover medical concerns of compressed gas diving, including the risks and benefits of air,  enhanced oxygen (nitrox), and trimix diving, and the physics and physiology of SCUBA (see Image. Oxygen Partial Pressure Range for Humans While Using Mixed Gases).[1][2] 

Issues of Concern

Open- Versus Closed-Circuit Diving

Open

Open circuit diving can include compressed air, nitrox, and trimix. As exhaust gas leaves the circuit, the diver is essentially safe so long as they have sufficient gas to breathe. The ultimate response to any problem in open circuit diving is exhaling and ascending to the surface. As a result, open circuit diving accidents usually result from a heart attack, arterial gas embolism (from rapid ascent or severe decompression sickness (DCS), running out of gas, or environmental factors, for example, a diver who is lost or trapped.[3]

Closed

Closed-circuit diving requires significantly more training and falls under the rubric of technical diving. Most sports diving systems are semi-closed circuits, but the military relies on completely closed circuits. As little or no bubbles are released, underwater stealth allows the diver to come into the proximity of marine life or enemy vessels without detection. Semi-closed circuit sports diving typically uses nitrox (enhanced oxygenated air) to add gas when computer-controlled oxygen sensors detect low partial pressures. Exhaled air is scrubbed of carbon dioxide by various filter substances depending on the system; barium hydroxide and sodium peroxide are examples.[1]

In closed-circuit diving, in addition to open-circuit causes of diving accidents, you also have oxygen seizures, hypoxia, and equipment-induced DCS. When diving a rebreather, too much carbon dioxide and failure of the rebreather can lead to injury or death. Oxygen toxicity from too much oxygen at depth or hypoxia from too little oxygen at depth may be due to a sensor malfunction, a diver's physiology, or an error in gas selection. Also, these divers often operate at extreme depths. A safe ascent requires safety stops to off-gas excess nitrogen to avoid DCS, so an immediate ascent to the surface is not possible.[1]

Regardless of circuit type, diving with compressed gas forms nitrogen bubbles in the bloodstream. The body's ability to clear the excess nitrogen is dependent on many factors and determines whether the diver is injured as they off the gas.

Types of Compressed Gas Used in SCUBA

Air

Air is the most common and safest gas used in sports diving. Above 100 feet of depth, there are virtually no risks. Oxygen toxicity does not occur until a diver is below 218 feet. However, at depths below 100 feet, excess nitrogen can result in nitrogen narcosis and vulnerability to DCS. Nitrogen narcosis is an anesthetic effect due to high nitrogen partial pressure in the blood, and it causes impaired vision, drunkenness, and disorientation. By 200 feet, nitrogen narcosis is so severe that the majority of divers are disabled. It clears rapidly on the ascent to shallower depths, and divers can increase their tolerance to nitrogen narcosis by repeated exposure.

Nitrox

Nitrox or enhanced air oxygen (EAN) is a mixed gas whose oxygen percentage exceeds 21% (normally present in air). Most commonly, nitrox is mixed with 32% or 36% oxygen, thus lowering the nitrogen content. By reducing the amount of nitrogen, nitrox reduces the risk of nitrogen narcosis and decompression sickness at depths of 110 feet or less. It is easier to breathe at depth and prolongs the diver's time at shallower depths by reducing nitrogen loading. However, the risk of oxygen toxicity is significant at greater depths, particularly deeper than 100 feet. Briefly, oxygen toxicity occurs when excess partial pressures of oxygen enter the tissues. It burns the central nervous system, lungs, and eyes by oxidative damage to cell membranes, leading to alveolar collapse in the lungs, retinal detachment, and seizures. Initial symptoms are a cough from tracheal irritation and myopia.Trimix

Trimix is a mixed gas composed of helium, oxygen, and nitrogen. The combination is altered based on depth requirements. A standard mix is 30% helium, 20% oxygen, and 50% nitrogen, or trimix 20/30. It reduces nitrogen narcosis and oxygen toxicity on deep dives (200 feet or more). The helium reduces breathing resistance, which is important for the high volumes of gas required at greater depths. Helium also enters and leaves the tissue quickly, which reduces decompression periods in saturation diving. It also reduces hyperbaric arthralgia on descent. However, helium conducts body heat 6 times faster than air, increasing the risk of hypothermia. Also, since helium rapidly absorbs, it requires deeper decompression stops than other mixed gases on the ascent. While at shallower depths, hypoxia can occur on trimix, so different types of compressed gas are also necessary. Its most significant disadvantage, however, is the cost of training, mixing, and accidents.SCUBA Physics and Physiology

It is necessary to understand the concept of partial pressure to understand the physiological ramifications of breathing various gas mixtures under pressure. The partial pressure of a particular gas constituent in a gas mixture represents the portion of the total pressure of the gas mixture exerted by the specific constituent. If you add up all the partial pressures of all the different components of a gas mixture, their total would be equal to the total pressure of the mixture.

To maintain oxygenation at depth, higher volumes of air are necessary due to Boyle's law. Boyle's law states that the absolute pressure exerted by a given mass of an ideal gas is inversely proportional to the volume it occupies if the temperature and amount of gas remain unchanged within a closed system. For every 33 feet (10 meters) of depth in seawater, the ambient pressure increases by an additional 14.7 psi (1 atm). At a depth of 99 feet (30 meters), the ambient pressure is 4 atm, 1 atm caused by the Earth's atmosphere, plus 3 atm for every 33 feet (10 meters) of depth. Therefore, a diver must inhale 4 times the air at 100 feet than at the surface to deliver the same amount of oxygen to the tissues.[4]

Henry's law states that "the amount of any given gas that dissolves in a liquid at a given temperature is a function of the partial pressure of that gas in contact with the liquid." What this means for divers is that gas molecules dissolve into the blood in proportion to the partial pressure of that gas in the lungs. As warm-blooded creatures, our core body temperature remains relatively constant; this leaves a specific range in which the partial pressure of oxygen is safe and necessary for consciousness, as described in the image below.

Similarly, excess dissolved nitrogen in the blood can lead to bubble formation, nitrogen narcosis, and, on a rapid ascent, decompression sickness. The overall volume of compressed gas expands on the ascent, whether the gas is in the lungs, the blood, or the middle ear and sinuses, as described in Boyle's Law.[5]

If one holds their breath on the ascent, this results in barotrauma from hyperinflation of the lungs and can result in gas embolism as gas is forced into the pulmonary vasculature. In the sinuses or middle ear, barotrauma occurs when the gas cannot equalize to the external pressure; the overpressure can produce a "squeeze" or epistaxis to compensate. In the blood, the dissolved gas saturates out and forms bubbles. These gas bubbles can embolize, causing myocardial infarctions or cerebral vascular accidents when there is a right to left shunt in the heart, for instance, patent foramen ovale or an atrial septal defect.

Clinical Significance

Scuba diving has provided humankind with the freedom and opportunity to explore the underwater world. Understanding the basic physiology and application is essential to clinical practice, as the sport has inherent risks that require clinician familiarity with its physiology.

Review Questions

Oxygen Partial Pressure Limits

Figure

Oxygen Partial Pressure Limits. Raymond KA, Cooper JS. Scuba Diving Physiology. Update October 2022. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

References

1.
Dugrenot E, Balestra C, Gouin E, L'Her E, Guerrero F. Physiological effects of mixed-gas deep sea dives using a closed-circuit rebreather: a field pilot study. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2021 Dec;121(12):3323-3331. [PubMed: 34435274]
2.
Gemba KL, Nosal EM, Reed TR. Partial dereverberation used to characterize open circuit scuba diver signatures. J Acoust Soc Am. 2014 Aug;136(2):623-33. [PubMed: 25096097]
3.
Denoble PJ, Caruso JL, Dear Gde L, Pieper CF, Vann RD. Common causes of open-circuit recreational diving fatalities. Undersea Hyperb Med. 2008 Nov-Dec;35(6):393-406. [PubMed: 19175195]
4.
Shopov NG. Study of the changes in respiratory function in self-contained underwater breathing apparatus divers. Int Marit Health. 2019;70(1):61-64. [PubMed: 30931519]
5.
Blake DF, Crowe M, Mitchell SJ, Aitken P, Pollock NW. Vibration and bubbles: a systematic review of the effects of helicopter retrieval on injured divers. Diving Hyperb Med. 2018 Dec 24;48(4):235-240. [PMC free article: PMC6355309] [PubMed: 30517957]

Disclosure: Keith Raymond declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Disclosure: Jeffrey Cooper declares no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies.

Copyright © 2024, StatPearls Publishing LLC.

This book is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ ), which permits others to distribute the work, provided that the article is not altered or used commercially. You are not required to obtain permission to distribute this article, provided that you credit the author and journal.

Bookshelf ID: NBK441837PMID: 28722867

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