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Diver holds his breath for over 29 MINUTES to set new world record

Diver holds his breath for over 29 MINUTES to set new world record,

A diver has set a truly breathtaking world record for the longest time spent holding his breath underwater.

Croatian freediver Vitomir Maričić spent 29 minutes and three seconds submerged in water on a single breath.

That set the Guinness World Record for the ‘longest time breath held voluntarily underwater’, smashing the previous record by almost five minutes.

During his half-hour feat, Mr Maričić held his breath for twice the length of a bottlenose dolphin’s longest recorded dive. 

In fact, that incredible achievement puts Mr Maričić on par with a harbour seal.

Harbour seals can exchange 90 per cent of the air in their lungs with one breath, compared to only 20 per cent in humans. 

So, to compete with nature’s freedivers, Mr Maričić used pure oxygen to purge his blood of excess nitrogen. 

He breathed pure oxygen for 10 minutes before holding his breath, bringing his blood oxygen levels to five times the normal limit. 

A freediver has set a new world record for holding their breath underwater, lasting a shocking 29 minutes and three seconds on a single breath

Croatian freediver Vitomir Mari¿i¿ broke the world record for the longest time spent underwater on a single breath, smashing the previous record by more than four minutes

On June 14, Mr Maričić lay down in a three-metre pool inside the Bristol Hotel in Opatija, Croatia, in front of five official judges and some 100 spectators.

Before trying to hold his breath, he used a tank of pure oxygen to undergo a process called denitrogenation. 

Typically, the lungs of a healthy adult hold about 450ml of usable oxygen because oxygen only makes up about 21 per cent of the air we breathe.

Breathing pure oxygen means that the lungs can take in around three litres of oxygen with every breath, washing nitrogen out of the blood and supercharging it with oxygen.

That not only filled his red blood cells with as much oxygen as possible, but also dissolved oxygen into his blood plasma – something that cannot happen under normal circumstances.  

In a medical setting, doctors might use this technique to expand an unconscious patient’s ‘safe apnea time’ – the amount of time someone can safely go without breathing.

Here, Mr Maričić used the same principle to massively enhance his ability to hold his breath.

However, even with the assistance of pure oxygen, holding your breath for half an hour is still a superhuman achievement.

Vitomir Mari¿i¿ (pictured) held his breath for more than twice as long as a bottlenose dolphin by breathing pure oxygen ten minutes prior to the challenge

The longest someone has held their breath 

With oxygen assistance

  1. Vitomir Maričić: 29 mins 3 secs 
  2. Budimir Šobat: 24 mins and 37 secs
  3. David Blaine:  17 mins 4 secs

Without oxygen assistance (male)

  1. Stéphane Mifsud: 11 mins 35 secs
  2. Tom Sietas: 10 mins 12 secs
  3. Herbert Nitsh: 9 mins 4 secs

Without oxygen assistance (female)

  1. Heike Schwerdtner: 9 mins 22 secs
  2. Natalia Molchanova: 9 mins 2 secs
  3. Lotta Ericson: 6 mins 31 secs  
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In most people, the safe apnea time with pure oxygen is still only eight minutes – less than a third of the time Mr Maričić went without a breath. 

The previous record for an oxygen-assisted breath hold was set by fellow-Croatian Budimir Šobat, who held his breath for 24 minutes and 37 seconds.

Before that, the record had been set by the magician David Blaine, who held his breath for 17 minutes and four seconds during a live broadcast on The Oprah Winfrey Show.

Going further requires intense levels of mental control and the use of techniques that slow down the body’s oxygen consumption.

Harbour seals, for example, are able to slow their heartbeats from 100 beats per minute to just 10 while underwater. 

In a post on Instagram, Mr Maričić says: ‘It’s not about how much you inhale, it’s about how little you need. No panic, no thoughts, just silence. That’s how you make it to 29.’

Mr Maričić also warns that this record is not something most people should attempt to repeat.

‘This is a very advanced stunt done after years of professional training and should not be attempted without proper guidance and safety. O2 and CO2 toxicity can be lethal,’ he wrote on Instagram. 

The first record for an oxygen-assisted breath hold was set by the magician David Blaine, who held his breath for 17 minutes during a live recording of The Oprah Winfrey Show

Breathing pure oxygen can lead to a condition called oxygen toxicity, which can lead to dizziness, confusion, and convulsions.

Taking supplemental oxygen before diving also increases the risk of blacking out while underwater, since it allows more time for CO2 to build up in the bloodstream. 

This can lead to carbon dioxide toxicity, which causes difficulty breathing, vomiting, and blackouts.

Mr Maričić said: ‘Do have in mind, diving with pure O2 can be dangerous and even fatal.’

South Korea’s real-life mermaids: The female divers swimming to 65ft until they are 90

Known as Haenyeo, or ‘women of the sea’, are a group of female freedivers from the island of Jeju, South Korea.

This talented group of women have been in charge of providing for their families since the 17th century when many of the men were either conscripted to the army or had lost their lives at sea.

Despite their age, these women spent more than half of their time underwater across the two to 10 hours of diving per day – the greatest proportion of any humans previously studied.

According to a recent study, the women spend more of their time out at sea than polar bears.

They use short, quick dives to gather seafood from the ocean floor, including conches, abalone and various other sea creatures. 

They are able to reach depths of 65 ft using no equipment other than their wetsuits, flippers, and goggles.

Following a dive they would ‘recover’ for an average of just nine seconds above water before plunging down again.

That allowed them to spend more time underwater than marine mammals like beevers, spending an astonishing 56 per cent of their time submerged. 

Surprisingly, the women did not display the classic mammalian ‘dive response’ – a slowing of the heart and reduced blood flow to muscles during dives. Instead, they showed increased heart rates and only mild oxygen reductions in the brain and muscles.

This suggests their unique style of short, shallow and frequent dives may trigger different adaptations to their mammalian counterparts, the team explained.

Croatian freediver Vitomir Maričić spent 29 minutes and three seconds submerged in water on a single breath, holding his breath for twice as long as a bottlenose dolphin.

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