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Global longitudinal strain assessment of cardiac function and extravascular lung water formation after diving using semi-closed circuit rebreather

Authors :
María Martinez-Villar
Antonio Tello-Montoliu
Agustín Olea
Ángel Pujante
Daniel Saura
Silvia Martín
Nereo Venero
Ana Carneiro-Mosquera
Nuria Ruiz de Pascual
Noelia Valero
Miguel Martinez-Herrera
Inmaculada Ramírez-Macías
Juan Antonio Vilchez
Miguel García Navarro
Gonzalo de la Morena
Domingo Pascual
Source :
European Journal of Applied Physiology. 122:945-954
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

The aim of the present investigation is to study the relationship of ventricular global longitudinal strain (GLS) and ultrasound lung comets (ULC) formation to establish a link between extravascular pulmonary water formation and cardiac contractile dysfunction.This is a prospective observational study including 14 active military divers. The subjects performed two sea dives of 120 min each with a semi-closed SCUBA circuit at 10 m depth. Divers were examined at baseline, 15 min (D1) and 60 min (D2) after diving. The evaluation included pulmonary and cardiac echography (including speckle tracking techniques). Blood samples were drawn at baseline and after diving, assessing hs-TnT and Endothelin-1.ULC were detected in 9 (64.2%) and 8 (57.1%) of the subjects after D1 and D2 respectively. No differences were found in right and left ventricular GLS after both immersions (RV: Baseline: - 17.9 4.9 vs. D1: - 17.2 6.5 and D2: - 16.7 5.8 sIn the present study, no ventricular contractile dysfunction was observed. However, increase pulmonary vasoconstriction markers were present after diving.

Details

ISSN :
14396327 and 14396319
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Applied Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ab1b8c82d4122229b05cc126fa559e9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-022-04887-6