Abstract

A patent foramen ovale (PFO) is linked to increased risk of decompression illness in divers. One theory is that venous gas emboli crossing the PFO can be minimized by avoiding lifting, straining and Valsalva maneuvers. Alternatively, we hypothesized that mild increases in external inspiratory and expiratory resistance, similar to that provided by a SCUBA regulator, recruit the PFO. Nine healthy adults with a Valsalva‐proven PFO completed three randomized trials (inspiratory, expiratory, and combined external loading) with six levels of increasing external resistance (2–20 cmH2O/L/sec). An agitated saline contrast echocardiogram was performed at each level to determine foramen ovale patency. Contrary to our hypothesis, there was no relationship between the number of subjects recruiting their PFO and the level of external resistance. In fact, at least 50% of participants recruited their PFO during 14 of 18 trials and there was no difference between the combined inspiratory, expiratory, or combined external resistance trials (P > 0.05). We further examined the relationship between PFO recruitment and intrathoracic pressure, estimated from esophageal pressure. Esophageal pressure was not different between participants with and without a recruited PFO. Intrasubject variability was the most important predictor of PFO patency, suggesting that some individuals are more likely to recruit their PFO in the face of even mild external resistance. Right‐to‐left bubble passage through the PFO occurs in conditions that are physiologically relevant to divers. Transthoracic echocardiography with mild external breathing resistance may be a tool to identify divers that are at risk of PFO‐related decompression illness.

Highlights

  • The foramen ovale is an atrial septal shunt present that functionally closes at birth

  • The addition of external resistance caused patent foramen ovale (PFO) recruitment, with more than half of subjects recruiting their PFOs in 14/18 trials (Fig. 1)

  • In this study and our previous work, we found that the addition of only a minor amount of external resistance caused at least half of our participants to recruit their PFO, challenging the idea that a Valsalva is the impetus to open the PFO

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Summary

Introduction

The foramen ovale is an atrial septal shunt present that functionally closes at birth. Divers with a patent foramen ovale (PFO) have a four-time greater prevalence of decompression illness (DCI) than divers without a PFO (Torti et al 2004). Consequences of DCI can include nitrogen microbubble formation within tissues to cause local damage (decompression sickness), pulmonary barotrauma, and injury due to systemic-arterial gas a 2018 The Authors. Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society.

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