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Sgn Cdr John Duncan, RNZN Director of Naval Medicine

Diving Medicine. Sgn Cdr John Duncan, RNZN Director of Naval Medicine. Navy Hospital. Slark HBU. HMNZS MANAWANUI. Diving records. 7200 ft and submerged for two hours 2000ft and submerged for an hour Free diving ~100m No limits 214 Meters. Caisson Disease. Haldane.

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Sgn Cdr John Duncan, RNZN Director of Naval Medicine

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  1. Diving Medicine Sgn Cdr John Duncan, RNZN Director of Naval Medicine

  2. Navy Hospital

  3. Slark HBU

  4. HMNZS MANAWANUI

  5. Diving records • 7200 ft and submerged for two hours • 2000ft and submerged for an hour • Free diving ~100m • No limits 214 Meters

  6. Caisson Disease

  7. Haldane • 1905-1907 Haldanes work • Five compartment model • 2:1 Ratio • Research with goats • Refined on divers • Ironically a lot of divers today behave like goats • Still basis of tables today

  8. Goat Picture

  9. Diver Numbers

  10. CAGE - cerebral arterial gas embolism • Air trapped in lung may expand and burst into arterial system via pulmonary veins – goes to brain • Massive bubble load may cross to pulmonary veins through lungs – goes to brain • Presents with rapid onset neurological symptoms • Patients often recover, then deteriorate

  11. Decompression illness • Bubbles form in tissue/blood from dissolvedN2 on ascentif time / depth of dive was too great, and ascent is too fast • DCI can be avoided by very slow ascent (but this is sometimes too slow to be practical) • Bubbles damage vessels and tissue • Variable presentation - pain, weakness, feeling ‘off colour’, breathlessness

  12. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS- evolution of bubbles from dissolved nitrogen • Air breathed at greater pressure during dive • Gas solubility increased at greater pressure • N2 absorbed into blood and tissues • Amount of gas depends on time and depth • N2 solubility declines during ascent (as pressure decreases) • Bubble formation - tissues and blood

  13. RISK FACTORS FOR DCI • Too deep / too long – exceed table limits • Rapid ascent • Omitted decompression • Repetitive diving (multiple ascents) • “Bounce dives” • Flying after diving – no flying for 24 hours • Age

  14. RISK FACTORS FOR DCI 2 • Inter-current illness, cold, working hard, etc. • Panic • Gear Failure • Poor planing

  15. Bubbles tissues  venous blood (some bubble formation)  lungs * off-gas arteries  organs

  16. Tissue bubbles • Mechanical effects • compression • stretch • myelin sheaths, bone, spinal cord, tendon, etc • Biochemical • activation of complement • coagulation • kinins

  17. Effects • Reduced microcirculation • ischaemia (haemorrhagic or thrombotic) • vessel permeability • oedema • inflammation

  18. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS - presentation of disease • Marked variation, from mild constitutional symptoms to paralysis • Most cases apparent within 24 hours • Only 50% have objective signs • Worst cases are early onset with progressive neurological symptoms • Diving may not reflect severity • Neurology may not “make sense”

  19. Classification • Decompression sickness • Type I - musculoskeletal, skin, lymphatic, constitutional • Type II - neurological, cardiorespiratory, vestibular • Arterial gas embolism • Barotrauma Little diagnostic or prognostic significance

  20. Current classification • Decompression illness • acute or chronic • static, progressive, relapsing, spontaneously resolving • organ system involved (cutaneous, cerebral, spinal, musculoskeletal, lymphatic, etc) • +/- barotrauma

  21. Differentiating between pathological processes • Decompression illness - due to inert gas load and bubble evolution…. • Barotrauma • Other diving-related illness

  22. Making a diagnosis • Depth-time profile gives indication of inert gas load • Pattern of dive - no. and speed of ascents, etc • Time of onset of symptoms • Symptom evolution • Signs

  23. Cerebral emboli - CAGE • Usually rapid onset on surfacing • Loss of consciousness or fitting • Victims may drown • Spontaneous recovery of consciousness • Apparent resolution, then deterioration

  24. Symptom frequencySymptoms after diving are common, DCI is not • Pain 40% • Altered sensation 20% • Dizziness 8% • Fatigue, headache, weakness 5% • Nausea, SOB 3% • Altered LOC 2% • Rash < 1%

  25. THE ‘CLASSICAL’ PATIENT Exceeds time / depth Rapid onset of pain Followed soon after by weakness and sensory changes Presents early THE ‘TYPICAL’ PATIENT Borderline time / depth Initially well Later, migratory aches, feels “off colour” and tired Seeks help several days after diving DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS classical vs typical patients

  26. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS - presentation by system

  27. Assessing a diver • A, B, C and if conscious and talking – start oxygen @ 4L/minute, take blood pressure and pulse • RECORD EVERYTHING – TIME, etc • Dive profile – depth, time, gas, any events • When did they first notice symptoms? • What were they? • What has happened to the symptoms since? • How do they feel now? • When did they last pass urine?

  28. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS- evaluation in first aid BRIEF HISTORY BRIEF EXAMINATION Depth(s) / time(s) Vital signs Number of ascents Chest Nature of ascents Neurological Nature of dive Symptoms Temporal relation of symptoms to dive

  29. Be suspicious if there is any history of altered consciousness, even if transient – this might be CAGE, which is serious Refer for treatment diving emergency services D.E.S. number (09) 4458454

  30. D.E.S. service • Available 24/7 • Call will be answered by Navy Hospital staff - get basic details • Give contact number • Experienced doctor & consultant on call • Response: • advice on initial management • transfer immediately (St John coordinate) OR • assess at local hospital OR • review next day

  31. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS - steps in DCI first aid • ABCs • Position • Oxygen • Fluids • Evaluate • Contact D.E.S. • Evacuate

  32. CURRENT ADVICE Horizontal Recovery position if LOC is decreased Previous advice was head down THE CASE AGAINST HEAD DOWN Difficulty Oral fluid administration Increase ICP and cerebral oedema Arterialisation of venous bubbles DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS - positioning in first aid

  33. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS - oxygen in first aid

  34. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS - IV fluids in first aid

  35. Adjunctive treatments • Possible benefit: • NSAIDs (oral, IM) • lignocaine (IV infusion) • Of no benefit: • heparin or other anticoagulants • steroids

  36. DECOMPRESSION ILLNESS- evacuation in first aid • Not always necessary • Advice from D.E.S. is usually sought first • Minimise altitude – either road, or fixed wing at normal atmospheric pressure (1 ATA), or rotary (but <300m) • Maintain oxygen administration • Maintain horizontal posture in acute cases • Avoid pain relief • No entonox

  37. HELICOPTER Noisy Poor access to patient Unpressurised Ideal for short coastal distances Good for isolated areas, boats FIXED WING Quieter Better access May be pressurised Ideal for long haul over high country Limited if no strip Helicopter vs fixed wing

  38. Summary: initial management • CPR if necessary • Oxygen - 100% if possible (need rebreather) • Lie flat • Get advice • Rehydration (fluid balance) • oral or IV crystalloid • 1L stat, 1L 4-6 hrly • Evacuate for recompression • NSAIDs if needed

  39. Recompression treatment • Recompress diver to depth • can use oxygen or oxygen-helium • bubble compression • increase diffusion gradient so gas leaves bubble • counter effects of pulmonary AV shunting • deliver high oxygen tensions to damaged tissue

  40. Recompression therapy 18m 30min 9m 1hr 2hrs surface (0m) •  = air ‘breaks’ to reduce oxygen toxicity (and for convenience, comfort, etc)

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