Ah, those British gossip tabloids. How fun they are. In April, the Daily Star reported that celebrity Katie Price, the
British version of Pamela Anderson, was warned her surgically-enhanced breasts could explode if she went diving.
Price was on vacation at the Red Sea resort Sharm el-Sheik and wanted to take a dive course but was told scare stories
(we don’t know by whom) about implants exploding underwater. The Daily Star’s source said, “Given the risks, and
how long she has spent perfecting her boobs, it is unlikely Katie will go ahead.”
So do breast implants (or testicular implants on men) change size or explode from pressure underwater? Do they
affect buoyancy? What happens to them after a dive or on the outbound flight? Richard Vann, vice president of
research at Divers Alert Network, led a study two decades ago to find out. He placed breast implants in the hyperbaric
chamber at Duke University Medical Center. (The study did not simulate the implant in human tissue.) He tested
three types - - silicone-filled, saline-filled and an equal mix of the two - - and simulated four different no-decompression
depth/time profiles between 40 and 120 feet To simulate commercial air flight, the implants were subjected to
7,000 feet of altitude, a typical airline cabin pressure, then at 30,000 feet, as if cabin pressure were lost. To measure
implants’ volume change at sea level, Vann placed them in water and measured changes hourly for eight hours by
weighing the water displaced by bubbles. To measure volume changes at altitude, he immersed implants in a waterfilled
container and measured the change in water level in a capillary tube.
Measuring implants at sea level after simulated dives, there was a small increase of one to four percent in implant
volume in both saline and silicone gel implants, depending on depth and duration of the dive. Bubbles in saline
implants coalesced into one large bubble, while between 12 and 50 flat bubbles formed in gel implants, the largest
measuring only 2.5 centimeters in diameter. The least volume change occurred in the saline-filled implant, because
nitrogen is less soluble in saline than silicone. The silicone-saline-filled type showed the greatest volume change.
Altitude exposure at 7,000 feet increased the volume changes to as much as five percent, but that seems unlikely to
cause distress for recreational divers during commercial air travel. At 30,000 feet, the increase in volume was four to
twelve percent, still not very large. Thus, bubble formations leading to small volume increases don’t seem likely to
damage the implants or surrounding tissue. If gas bubbles do form in an implant, they resolve over time.
So Katie, your boob implants won’t bust if you go diving. But avoid BCs with constrictive chest straps because they
can put undue pressure on the implant seams and increase the risk of rupture.
“Mammary Implants, Diving and Altitude Exposure,” by Richard R. Vann, Ronald Riefkohl, Gregory S. Georgiade and Nicholas
S. Georgiade, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, February 1988.