Abstract

Health monitoring during offshore saturation diving is complicated due to restricted access to the divers, the desire to keep invasive procedures to a minimum, and limited opportunity for laboratory work onboard dive support vessels (DSV). In this pilot study, we examined whether measuring salivary biomarkrers in samples collected by the divers themselves might be a feasible approach to environmental stress assessment. Nine saturation divers were trained in the passive drool method for saliva collection and proceeded to collect samples at nine time points before, during, and after an offshore commercial saturation diving campaign. Samples collected within the hyperbaric living chambers were decompressed and stored frozen at −20°C onboard the DSV until they were shipped to land for analysis. Passive drool samples were collected without loss and assayed for a selection of salivary biomarkers: secretory immunoglobulin A (SIgA), C-reactive protein (CRP), tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, interleukins IL-6, IL-8, IL-1β, as well as cortisol and alpha-amylase. During the bottom phase of the hyperbaric saturation, SIgA, CRP, TNF-α, IL-8 and IL-1β increased significantly, whereas IL-6, cortisol and alpha-amylase were unchanged. All markers returned to pre-dive levels after the divers were decompressed back to surface pressure. We conclude that salivary biomarker analysis may be a feasible approach to stress assessment in offshore saturation diving. The results of our pilot test are consonant with an activation of the sympathetic nervous system related to systemic inflammation during hyperbaric and hyperoxic saturation.

Highlights

  • Saturation diving is used for underwater work that requires direct human intervention

  • This study aimed to examine whether salivary biomarker analysis might be a feasible approach for the assessment of environmental stress in offshore saturation diving

  • The saliva samples were collected by the divers themselves during a commercial diving campaign and transferred from the dive support vessels (DSV) to shore for analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Saturation diving is used for underwater work that requires direct human intervention. With advancements in genomics and molecular biology, blood biomarkers of oxidative stress and inflammation have been studied in different types of diving, including saturation diving, to deepen the knowledge on the interactions between the immune system and the divers’ physiology (Eftedal et al, 2013; Sureda et al, 2014; Lautridou et al, 2016, 2017; Kiboub et al, 2018). Biomarkers are present in other body fluids that are less challenging to obtain and prepare for analysis This study aimed to examine whether salivary biomarker analysis might be a feasible approach for the assessment of environmental stress in offshore saturation diving. A panel of eight biomarkers was chosen to reflect stress responses in salivary glands and tissues, with emphasis on oxidative stress and inflammation which we hypothesized would increase due to the divers’ hyperbaric and hyperoxic work environment

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