Wearing a wet suit in the wrong
conditions can lead to anxiety and
panic, according to the results of a
study by Drs. K. F. Koltyn and Wm.
P. Morgan at the Department of
Kinesiology at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, which was
funded by the University of Wisconsin
Sea Grant Institute. This is a
synopsis of their study.
Panic is the primary cause of
death in scuba diving, especially
when it precedes an uncontrolled
ascent that result in
death. If, for example, a diver is
too warm or too cold, it is
possible that anxiety might
occur and provoke a panic
response.
On land, aerobic exercise
reduces anxiety. But does that
work in diving?
Preliminary research on the
interaction of exercise, water
temperature, and wet suits
reveals different anxiety responses
for different temperatures. In a
study six years ago by K. F.
Koltyn, C. L Shake, and Wm. P.
Morgan, ten certified divers
completed 30 minutes of finning
in warm (29°C) and cold (18°C)
water without a wet suit.
As might be expected, in the
cold water anxiety decreased significantly when divers wore a
wet suit and increased significantly
when they did not.
However, in the warm water,
anxiety increased significantly
when divers wore a wet suit.
There was no significant change
when they did not.
Because of these results, Drs.
Koltyn and Morgan examined
how a wet suit influenced
temperature and anxiety during
underwater swimming. They
wanted to determine the effect
of wearing a wet suit on air
consumption, respiration rate,
breathing distress, heart rate,
perception of effort, and how
these variables affected anxiety.
Thirteen male certified
divers (mean age 25) were tested
in an indoor pool with water at
24°C (75.2°F). On separate days,
the divers wore a bathing suit,
and the second a quarter-inch
neoprene wet suit, without hood
or gloves. Core temperature was
measured before, during, and
after underwater exercise with a
rectal thermometer attached to
a 2 m extension attached to a
digital display thermometer.
Heart rate, respiration rate, and
compressed air use were assessed
throughout the study.
Once submerged, the divers
became neutrally buoyant, then
rested for 10 minutes at 1.5
meters. They answered test
questions (the Body Awareness
Scale and the State-Trait Anxiety
Inventory) using a clipboard
and grease pencil. This was
followed by a 20-minute moderately
paced kicking swim. The
divers made subjective ratings of
perceived exertion (arms, legs,
and overall) via an underwater
communication system during
the swim. Rate of breathing was
recorded. They rested again,
and completed questions. After
they left the pool, thermal and
comfort ratings were assessed
and the test questions repeated.
Results
As expected, during swimming
the divers' heart rate,
respiration rate and air consumption
increased significantly in both the bathing-suit and
wetsuit conditions. In the wet
suits, however, heart rate and air
consumption were significantly
higher.
Wearing a quarter-inch wet
suit resulted in a significant
increase in core temperature
and led the divers to feel warm.
In comparison, core temperature
remained unchanged after
underwater exercise while
wearing a nylon bathing suit;
these divers reported a "neutral"
feeling, neither warm nor cold.
When clad in a wet suit, the
divers registered a significant
increase in anxiety immediately
after swimming, while in bathing
suits they did not. Fifteen
minutes after swimming, the
anxiety was significantly lower
when clad in a bathing suit
rather than in a wetsuit.
Perceived exertion increased
significantly after swimming in
the wet suit, while in a bathing
suit the rise was insignificant.
Wearing the wet suit was associated
with increases in heart rate,
respiration rate, and air consumption,
but these were
independent of anxiety responses.
In other words, divers
can be aware of their breathing
without experiencing anxiety
responses.
These results demonstrate
that
- the anxiety-relieving effect
of underwater exercise occurs in
the absence of an increase in
core temperature.
- an increase in core temperature
is actually associated
with elevated anxiety.
Because increased anxiety
can lead to panic and panic can
cause uncontrolled ascents,
unnecessarily wearing a wet suit
in tropical water increases diving
risk. And you surely burn more
air.
Ben Davison