TL;DR: In this paper, the stability of metal sheet electrodes was quantified using Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (AAS) using cyclic voltammetry technique, and the results showed that all metal sheet and their composite electrodes except Cu were stable in a KOH solution.
TL;DR: To analyze the effects of pressure and gas composition on thermoregulation, guinea pigs were exposed to 10–60 atm breathing O2 and H2 (hydrox), O2and He (heliox), or O2, N2 and He (N2-trimix), at 26–36°C.
TL;DR: ATw is associated with the differences in O2 pulse for animals breathing heliox vs. hydrox, and inclusion of ATw made a significantly better model with fewer variables.
Abstract: Diving is known to induce a change in the amplitude of the T wave (ATw) of electrocardiograms, but it is unknown whether this is linked to a change in cardiovascular performance. We analyzed ATw in guinea pigs at 10-60 atm and 25-36 degreesC, breathing 2% O2 in either helium (heliox; n = 10) or hydrogen (hydrox; n = 9) for 1 h at each pressure. Core temperature and electrocardiograms were detected by using implanted radiotelemeters. O2 consumption rate was measured by using gas chromatography. In a previous study (S. R. Kayar and E. C. Parker. J. Appl. Physiol. 82: 988-997, 1997), we analyzed the O2 pulse, i.e., the O2 consumption rate per heart beat, in the same animals. By multivariate regression analysis, we identified variables that were significant to O2 pulse: body surface area, chamber temperature, core temperature, and pressure. In this study, inclusion of ATw made a significantly better model with fewer variables. After normalizing for chamber temperature and pressure, the O2 pulse increased with increasing ATw in heliox (P = 0.001) but with decreasing ATw in hydrox (P < 0.001). Thus ATw is associated with the differences in O2 pulse for animals breathing heliox vs. hydrox.