Thursday, 25 April, 2024
HomeEditor's PickAgeing, overweight scuba divers face increased cardiac death risk

Ageing, overweight scuba divers face increased cardiac death risk

ScubaCardiac events are now the second leading cause of death, behind drowning,for scuba divers, with a large survey finding cholesterol, hypertension, body mass index, and smoking factors that are increasing the risk of mortality while diving, especially among older divers.

Older, overweight scuba divers are being urged to shed pounds to avoid an underwater heart attack. "Cardiac issues are now a leading factor in diving fatalities," said study author Dr Peter Buzzacott, of the University of Western Australia, in Crawley, Australia. "Divers who learned to dive years ago and who are now old and overweight, with high blood pressure and high cholesterol, are at increased risk of dying."

It is estimated that around 3.3m Americans and 2.8m Europeans will scuba dive this year. While recreational diving fatalities are rare (181 worldwide in 2015, including 35 in Europe) the number involving cardiac issues is climbing. From 1989 to 2015, the proportion of diving fatalities involving 50 to 59-year-olds increased steadily from 15% to 35%, while fatalities in the over-60s soared from 5% to 20%.Cardiac events are now the second leading cause of death behind drowning.

People who pay to go diving must learn skills and theory and be screened for fitness. But, after that initial screening, certification to scuba dive lasts for life. "This is where we see an increase in risk," said Buzzacott. "It's not commonly new divers who have health problems, because they have been recently screened. It is older divers who have not looked after their health."

Until now there has been no clear picture of how common cardiovascular risk factors are among active divers. Previous research has been limited to surveys of dive club members or insured divers. This was the first study conducted among divers in the general population.

The researchers used data from the Behavioural Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), a nationally representative telephone survey of US adults conducted by the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Scuba diving was included as an activity in the 2011, 2013, and 2015 surveys. The three surveys represent nearly 736m people, of whom around 498m (68%) had been active in the previous month and, for 113,892 people (0.02%), their principal activity was scuba diving.

This analysis compared the 113,892 scuba divers with a group of 338,933 active people matched for age, sex, and state of residence whose main activity was not scuba diving. The data shows that one-third of scuba divers are aged 50 years or older. They are often well educated, more than half earn at least $75,000 a year, and most are married with children.

A significantly greater proportion of divers (54%) had smoked cigarettes at some point compared with non-divers (46%) but more divers had given up smoking (40% versus 26%). Divers were more frequently overweight (48% versus 43%) but had lower mean body mass index overall than the non-divers (26 versus 27 kg/m2). One-third of divers (33%) had been diagnosed with high blood pressure and 30% had high cholesterol – levels that were not statistically different from the comparison group.

"I gave up smoking because of scuba diving, and I know this is relatively common from conversations I've had on dive boats with other divers," said Buzzacott. "My personal advice to all smokers is to give up smoking and take up diving. Not only is it better for you, and more fun, it's cheaper!"

Buzzacott advised all divers to have routine fitness assessments with their doctor, and tackle risk factors that otherwise could lead to a fatal cardiac event while diving. He noted: "Never before in history have so many people been exposing themselves to these extraordinary environmental stresses and, for the first time ever, we now have a large number of people who have spent their entire lives regularly scuba diving."

He said: "None of us are as young as we once were and it is important that we stay in shape for diving. The father of scuba, Jacques Cousteau, was diving at 90 and the current world's oldest diver is 94. He looks like he's in great shape and that is the role model for us all if we want to keep diving into our senior years. I certainly do."

Abstract
Cardiovascular factors among uninjured active adult recreational scuba divers in the USA are described. Scuba diving as an activity was included in 2011, 2013, and 2015 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data. One-third of active US scuba divers were aged ≥50 years and/or reported prior high cholesterol, around half were overweight, more than half reported having smoked cigarettes, and 32% reported hypertension or borderline hypertension. High cholesterol, hypertension, high body mass index, and smoking status should all be addressed during routine diving fitness physician assessments, to reduce the risk of mortality while diving.

Authors
Peter Buzzacott, Charles Edelson, Caslyn M Bennett, Petar J Denoble

[link url="https://www.escardio.org/The-ESC/Press-Office/Press-releases/ageing-overweight-scuba-divers-at-risk-of-underwater-heart-attack"]European Society of Cardiology material[/link]
[link url="http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2047487318790290"]European Journal of Preventative Cardiology abstract[/link]

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