Diving Hyperb Med. 2026 Jun 30;56(2):115-124. doi: 10.28920/dhm56.2.115-124.
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION: Rebreather diving carries an increased risk of hypercapnia. Hypercapnia can cause impaired cognition, breathlessness, and increase the risk of oxygen toxicity. We investigated whether a prior unblinded hypercapnia experience, compared to reading about hypercapnia symptoms, would improve divers’ ability to recognise hypercapnia and initiate self-rescue.
METHODS: Forty divers were recruited and randomised to receive either an unblinded hypercapnia experience (partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide [PETCO₂] of 8.5 kPa) or an information leaflet explaining hypercapnia symptoms. At least one month later, participants in each group were further randomised to undergo blinded exposure to hypercapnia or normocapnia, allocated at 3:1. The primary outcome was the proportion of participants who self-initiated bailout prior to reaching PETCO₂ 8.5 kPa. Continuous cardiorespiratory data (PETCO₂ and PETO₂, tidal volume, respiratory rate, minute ventilation, heart rate, and blood pressure) were also recorded. Subjective symptoms associated with hypercapnia were assessed with a visual analogue scale.
RESULTS: Thirteen of 15 participants (87%) who received the unblinded hypercapnia-experience self-initiated bailout compared to 10/15 information leaflet participants (67%) (P = 0.149). There was no difference in cardiorespiratory physiology parameters at bailout between the groups. Shortness of breath, light-headedness, and disorientation were the most intensely reported symptoms. Approximately half (47%) of participants who received a hypercapnia training experience had a correlated symptom response during their subsequent hypercapnia testing session.
CONCLUSIONS: Although no significant training benefit was shown, becoming familiar with the sensations associated with hypercapnia under appropriate supervision could be useful to rebreather divers both recreationally and within occupational settings.
PMID:42290571 | DOI:10.28920/dhm56.2.115-124
