학술논문

Tonometrie und Pachymetrie zur Erfassung der Augeninnendruckschwankungen beim Scuba-Tauchen
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Die Ophthalmologie. 121(1):53-60
Subject
Nitrox
Glaukom
Hyperbare Augenheilkunde
Augeninnendruck
Tauchtauglichkeit
Glaucoma
Hyperbaric ophthalmology
Intraocular pressure
Diving suitability
Language
German
ISSN
2731-720X
2731-7218
Abstract
Background: It is currently still not clarified whether diving using a self-contained breathing apparatus (SCUBA) is associated with intraocular pressure (IOP) fluctuations of clinical relevance and whether intensive diving could exacerbate the damage in glaucoma patients.Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effect of SCUBA diving on IOP in healthy volunteers without prior eye injuries or surgery. Hypothesis: recreational diving does not lead to significant increases or fluctuations of the IOP.Material and methods: The study included 16 divers (5 female) who performed a total of 96 dives with air or nitrox32 to a depth of 20–30 m for an average of 50 min. The central cornea thickness was measured using ultrasonic pachymetry Pocket IITM (Quantel Medical Pocket II™, Quantel Medical, Clermont-Ferrand, France), and the IOP was measured using an Icare® PRO (Icare® PRO, Icare Finland Oy, Espoo, Finland) directly before the dive and 10 min after surfacing.Results: All data refer to the right eye. Average IOP values ranged from 15.6 to 19.2 mm Hg pre-dive and 16.8 to 18.2 mm Hg post-dive. The range of IOP values was 2.2–11.5 mm Hg pre-dive (∆ = 9.3 mm Hg) and 2.7–14.8 mm Hg post-dive (∆ = 12.1 mm Hg). Of the divers 11.5% vs. 18.8% had increased IOP values > 21 mm Hg (pre-dive vs. post-dive).Conclusion: This study found no significant differences in IOP values between pre-dive and post-dive measurements in healthy SCUBA divers. Therefore, recreational SCUBA diving is unlikely to affect the IOP in healthy individuals.