Probabilistic models of the role of oxygen in human decompression sickness.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Probabilistic models of human decompression sickness (DCS) have been successful in describing DCS risk observed across a wide variety of N2-O2 dives but have failed to account for the observed DCS incidence in dives with high PO2 during decompression. Our most successful previous model, calibrated with 3,322 N2-O2 dives, predicts only 40% of the observed incidence in dives with 100% O2 breathing during decompression. We added 1,013 O2 decompression dives to the calibration data. Fitting the prior model to this expanded data set resulted in only a modest improvement in DCS prediction of O2 data. Therefore, two O2-specific modifications were proposed: PO2-based alteration of inert gas kinetics (model 1) and PO2 contribution to total inert gas (model 2). Both modifications statistically significantly improved the fit, and each predicts 90% of the observed DCS incidence in O2 dives. The success of models 1 and 2 in improving prediction of DCS occurrence suggests that elevated PO2 levels contribute to DCS risk, although less than the equivalent amount of N2. Both models allow rational optimization of O2 use in accelerating decompression procedures.
منابع مشابه
Predicting risk of decompression sickness in humans from outcomes in sheep.
In animals, the response to decompression scales as a power of species body mass. Consequently, decompression sickness (DCS) risk in humans should be well predicted from an animal model with a body mass comparable to humans. No-stop decompression outcomes in compressed air and nitrogen-oxygen dives with sheep (n = 394 dives, 14.5% DCS) and humans (n = 463 dives, 4.5% DCS) were used with linear-...
متن کاملBrain multi-infarct and decompression sickness
Scuba diving is associated with an important risk of developing decompression sickness secondary to formation of gas bubbles inside the body. The latter is formed mainly by nitrogen in the body on the diver’s way to the surface (1,2). In some cases, it might injure the central nervous system. Several decompression cases that have been associated with neurologic symptoms are described in the l...
متن کاملProbability of decompression sickness in no-stop air diving and subsaturation diving.
Probabilistic models allow estimation of the probability (Pdcs) that decompression sickness (DCS) will occur in any particular dive. Our objective is to provide Pdcs estimates for no-stop diving instructions used by the U.S. Navy and various other navies. To do so, we develop statistics-based (probabilistic) and intuition-based (deterministic) models using dive-outcome data from the U.S. Navy D...
متن کاملTreatment of nervous system injuries by hyperbaric oxygen: a review of molecular mechanisms
Background and aims: The use of hyperbaric oxygen therapy is one of the treatment methods to treat many diseases and injuries such as decompression sickness, wound healing, carbon monoxide poisoning, thermal burns, and nervous system injuries. This article aims to review the possible mechanisms of the effectiveness of this treatment in neurological injuries according to the available studies...
متن کاملRisk of decompression sickness in extreme human breath-hold diving.
The risk of decompression sickness (DCS) in human breath-hold diving is expected to increase as dives progress deeper until a depth is reached where total lung collapse stops additional nitrogen gas uptake. We assembled a database of all documented human breath-hold dives to 100 metres or greater, including both practice and record dives. Between 1976 and 2006 there were 192 such dives confirme...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of applied physiology
دوره 84 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1998