Abstract

Over 80% altitude decompression sickness (DCS) was reported during a 4-h exposure with mild exercise to 7620 m (25,000 ft) without prebreathe. Prebreathe for more than 1 h would be necessary to reduce the DCS risk below 40%. Use of a single period of exercise to enhance prebreathe effectiveness has been successfully tested and used during some U-2 operations. The current tests used multiple exercise sessions to enhance prebreathe (MEEP) as a means of improving denitrogenation efficiency.Two MEEP profiles, 30 or 60 min, preceded 4-h exposures to 7620 m with mild, upper-body exercise while breathing 100% oxygen. Resting prebreathe controls were from published studies at the same laboratory. Both MEEP profiles involved 10 min of strenuous dual-cycle ergometry (75% of maximal oxygen uptake) at the beginning of prebreathe. After a 15-min rest period during the 60-min prebreathe, an additional 5 min of strenuous ergometry was performed. Mild exercise was performed during 15 of the last 20 min of both prebreathe profiles.The 60-min MEEP resulted in 25% DCS and the 30-min MEEP 40% DCS (N.S.). The 25% incidence of DCS following the 60-min MEEP profile was significantly less than the 63% DCS following an equal-time, resting prebreathe control. Following the 30-min MEEP, DCS incidence was not greater than the incidence following a 60-min, resting prebreathe control. There was a lower incidence of venous gas emboli during the MEEP exposures than during resting control exposures.Denitrogenation with multiple periods of exercise provides a shorter alternative to resting prebreathe for reducing DCS risk during exposure to 7620 m.

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