Diving and Asphyxia

Diving and Asphyxia

Author: Robert Elsner

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1983-07-21

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13: 9780521250689

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This book concerns the comparative physiological adaptations of vertebrate animals, especially mammals, to cessation of breathing.


Free Diving Velocity: Techniques for Breath-Hold Diving

Free Diving Velocity: Techniques for Breath-Hold Diving

Author: Viona D. Rennoll

Publisher: Book Lovers HQ

Published: 2024-09-06

Total Pages: 178

ISBN-13:

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Free Diving Velocity: Techniques for Breath-Hold Diving is your ultimate resource for mastering the art of breath-hold diving. Designed for divers of all levels, this book equips you with the knowledge and skills needed to explore the depths with confidence and safety. Whether you're a beginner learning the fundamentals or an experienced diver looking to refine your techniques, Free Diving Velocity covers every aspect of the sport, from mental conditioning to advanced diving strategies. Discover the science behind breath control, oxygen conservation, and pressure management as you push your limits underwater. Learn essential techniques like equalization, efficient movement, and safety protocols to prevent shallow water blackouts and other common risks. This book also dives deep into the mental side of free diving, offering mindfulness exercises and visualization strategies to help you stay calm and focused during your dives. What sets Free Diving Velocity apart is its focus on safety. Each chapter emphasizes responsible diving practices and the importance of training with a dive buddy. With real-world tips from seasoned free divers, you'll gain the tools to assess your limits, avoid injuries, and dive deeper than ever before. What you will find in this book: Proven breathing techniques to extend dive times Equalization methods to manage underwater pressure Mental conditioning strategies for overcoming fear Tips for streamlining your body for efficient movement Safety guidelines and protocols for diving with a buddy Advanced training exercises to push your diving limits Prepare to take your freediving to the next level with Free Diving Velocity—your complete guide to diving deeper, staying longer, and experiencing the ocean like never before.


Oxygen

Oxygen

Author: William Trubridge

Publisher: HarperCollins

Published: 2017-11-01

Total Pages: 247

ISBN-13: 1775491447

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LEARN THE POWER OF THE HUMAN MIND FROM THE WORLD'S GREATEST FREEDIVER One of the most mesmerising books about the ocean you'll ever read... New Zealander William Trubridge has reached depths never thought possible on the precipice of low oxygen. In a sport where failure usually means blacking out, it is a freediver's daily life to contend with suffocation, narcosis, hallucinations, lactic acidosis, compressed lungs, and immense water-column pressure - all while diving into depths of ink black ocean. Exquisitely written, Oxygen is a mind-altering and immersive coming-of-age story about a boy who grew up on a sailing boat, with the sea his classroom and playground. It is about fighting the trappings of life on land, and pushing the limits of human physiology, to become the world's greatest freediver.


Oxygen (16pt Large Print Edition)

Oxygen (16pt Large Print Edition)

Author: William Trubridge

Publisher:

Published: 2017-11-23

Total Pages: 524

ISBN-13: 9780369319890

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The incredible under-water world of William Trubridge. A memoir of an aquatic affinity, the power of the subconscious mind and testing the limits of human physiology. William Trubridge spent his childhood on a sailing boat, waking to the sound of the sea. He set off for New Zealand from the UK with his family as an 18-month-old, spending the next ten years with the ocean as his school and his playground. He suffered a great deal of mental turmoil when eventually his family arrived in Hawke's Bay, where he had to stay on land to attend high-school. Not long after he finishing, William set-off for the Bahamas to learn the art of freediving, a form of breath-hold diving without assistance. He's still there today, where he trains and teaches at Dean's Blue Hole, the deepest sea water sink-hole in the world. Described as 'the greatest freediver of them all, ' William Trubridge is a 16 times world freediving record holder. He broke his own world record at Dean's Blue Hole in 2016, a dive he described as 'terrible' - he feared he was going to black out before he reached the surface. In a sport where there are between 40 and 60 fatal accidents every year, it's not surprising William has had his fair share of close calls, one of which took from him his sense of taste. Freediving is one of the oldest and most intriguing relationships humans have with the ocean. It requires building a tolerance to oxygen deprivation and the feeling of suffocation, coping with immense water-column pressure, increasing lung capacity by expanding diaphragm muscles and stretching areas of the body seldom used. William has studied the techniques of sea mammals to test the limits of human physiology, and his experiments make for incredibly gripping reading. But this is not just a book about freediving - it is a book about one man's wonderment with the ocean, its creatures and ecology. Exquisitely written, the book is a meditation on life and death, risk and mental toughness, dharma and discipline. There are also strong messages on overcoming life's adversity, whatever that may be, and how almost everyone's greatest adversary is actually, in the end, one's self


The physiological consequences of breath-hold diving in marine mammals; the Scholander legacy

The physiological consequences of breath-hold diving in marine mammals; the Scholander legacy

Author: Andreas Fahlman

Publisher: Frontiers E-books

Published:

Total Pages: 155

ISBN-13: 2889191001

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Breath-hold diving marine mammals are able to remain submerged for prolonged periods of time and dive to phenomenal depths while foraging. A number of physiological, biochemical and behavioral traits have been suggested that enable this life style, including the diving response, lung collapse, increased O2 stores, diving induced hypometabolism, and stroke-and-glide behavior to reduce dive metabolic cost. Since the initial studies by Scholander in the 1940‘s, when most of the physiological and biochemical traits were suggested, few have received as much study as the diving response and O2 management. The calculated aerobic dive limit (cADL) was an important concept which allowed calculation of the aerobic dive duration, and was defined as the total O2 stores divided by the rate of O2 consumption (metabolic rate). The total O2 stores have been defined for several species, and studies in both forced and freely diving animals have refined the metabolic cost of diving. Currently there appears to be little consensus about whether marine mammals perform a significant proportion of dives exceeding the cADL or not and there may be large differences between species. The diving response is a conserved physiological trait believed to arise from natural selection. The response includes diving-induced bradycardia, peripheral vasoconstriction, and altered blood flow distribution. While the response results in reduced cardiac work, it is not clear whether this is required to reduce the overall metabolic rate. An alternate hypothesis is that the primary role of the diving bradycardia is to regulate the degree of hypoxia in skeletal muscle so that blood and muscle O2 stores can be used more efficiently. Scholander suggested that the respiratory anatomy of marine mammals resulted in alveolar collapse at shallow depths (lung collapse), thereby limiting gas exchange. This trait would limit uptake of N2 and thereby reduce the risk of inert gas bubble formation and decompression sickness. In his initial treatise, Scholander suggested that alveolar collapse probably made inert gas bubble formation unlikely during a single dive, but that repeated dives could result in significant accumulation that could be risky. Despite this, lung collapse has been quoted as the main adaptation by which marine mammals reduce N2 levels and inert gas bubble formation. It was surprising, therefore, when recent necropsy reports from mass stranded whales indicated DCS like symptoms. More recent studies have shown that live marine mammals appear to experience bubbles under certain circumstances. These results raise some interesting questions. For example, are marine mammals ever at risk of DCS, and if so could N2 accumulation limit dive performance? While an impressive number of studies have provided a theoretical framework that explains the mechanistic basis of the diving response, and O2 management, many questions remain, some widely-accepted ideas actually lack sufficient experimental confirmation, and a variety of marine mammal species, potentially novel models for elucidating new diving adaptations, are understudied. The aim of this Frontiers Topic is to provide a synthesis of the current knowledge about the physiological responses of marine mammals that underlie their varied dive behavior. We also include novel contributions that challenge current ideas and that probe new hypotheses, utilize new experimental approaches, and explore new model species. We show that the field has recently entered a phase of renewed discovery that is not only unraveling more secrets of the natural diving response but will drive new applications to aid human exploration of the ocean depths. We also welcome comparative analyses, especially contributions that compare marine mammals with human divers.