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SCUBA
Dive Medicine
Gary
Podolsky MD
Objectives:
1.To
introduce Hyperbaric principles and their effect on the human body
2.Discuss
pathophysiology of common Dive Injuries
3.To
provide a basis for screening potential SCUBA diving candidates
4.
To discuss added considerations for divers in arctic environment
Scuba
diving is a popular sport that is gaining popularity in cold arctic
waters as well as warm tropical destinations. Scuba enthusiasts
wishing to dive in cold environs also face challenges that can affect
their health. This discussion will speak about generalized scuba
safety issues as well as specialized concerns when diving in arctic
and sub arctic waters
SCUBA
( S elf
C ontained U nderwater B
reathing A pparatus) diving is a safe
sport enjoyed by millions with a fatality rate less than downhill
skiing (estimated at 1 in 95000 dives.)
The
risks of serious injuries are either from breathing compressed air
or by the other environmental factors exists.
Scuba
diving requires that the participant be healthy and be able to respond
to problems under water. In the same way that an individual should
be competent to drive a car, divers should be held to a higher level
of competence since problems could endanger not only themselves
but also other divers and rescue workers.
WHEN
NOT TO DIVE
Absolute
conditions are those diseases or injuries where a person should
not dive under any circumstances. These may be temporary as some
conditions will change but are often permanent. An individual who
was previously cleared to dive may acquire a condition temporary
or permanent that would disqualify them from diving. It is every
divers responsibility to disclose any conditions that may make him
or her endangered, as well as anyone attempting to rescue them.
Relative contradictions are conditions that may or may not prevent
someone from diving, depending on an individual review by a physician
who has knowledge in scuba.
PREVENTION
Proper
scuba technique and medical screening may help minimize these hazards.
Scuba diving should be learned from a properly organized course,
and not in a compressed afternoon.
Panic
has also been a major determinant for disaster in diving. Experience
and training will help minimize this. Avoid diving partners who
are immature, intoxicated or using street drugs. If you don't like
your diving partner(s), break up with them before you agree to go
in the water, otherwise, stick with them until the dive is over.
ILLNESS
Divers
can be affected in many ways by dive related diseases, as well as
the mundane types. It is often difficult for even experienced physicians
to make a correct diagnosis in an ill diver.
Any
illness should be cleared with a dive physician or by checking with
the Divers Alert Network (D.A.N). If in doubt, don't dive. No matter
how expensive the trip was, remember you always can enjoy a snorkel,
which does not have the risk of dysbarism, since you are not breathing
compressed air.
CONDITIONS
THAT MAY PREVENT PEOPLE FROM DIVING
Because
of the varied severity of many conditions, this list is deliberately
vague and incomplete and persons with specific medical problems
should always clear them with a physician knowledgeable in diving.
People
generally do diving over 16 years of age, but frequently children
wish to dive. Children as young as 12 years may be considered for
diving but this should be very carefully thought out.
Cardiac
- Any serious cardiac
conditions should not dive unless screened by a Cardiologist and
are able to perform 13 METS on an exercise treadmill.
Pulmonary
- Any asthma or lung
disease should be assessed by a Respirologist, chest x-rays, spirometry
and possibly exercise challenge may be needed.
Neurological
- Patients with alterations
in consciousness or uncontrolled seizures should not dive. Prior
decompression illness should be carefully reviewed to evaluate if
they should ever dive again.
Ear/Nose/Throat
- Divers with hearing
in 1 ear or prior ear surgery should not dive. Sudden ear or sinus
infections should also not dive till conditions improved (there
is a risk of accident and they will have a painful dive anyways).
Gastrointestinal
- Divers with digestive
diseases have had increased incidences of injuries. Diseases should
be stabilized before diving is allowed.
Diabetes
- Diabetics with poor
control or end organ damage are not recommended to dive. Other endocrine
problems should be well controlled.
Extreme
obesity has had a higher
incidence of decompression illness.
Pregnancy
- Women who are or
many become pregnant (during dive trip) should not dive. The fetus
is vulnerable to dive injuries and the hyperbaric chamber as well.
Blood
diseases - Severe anemia
and sickle cell diseases should not dive.
Orthopedic
- People with severe
back pain or recent fractures should not dive. Prior aseptic necrosis
(a disease seen in commercial divers) should stop diving.
Behavior
- Any psychiatric condition
that limits an individual's ability to cooperate with others, solve
problems, or react to stress should not dive. Divers themselves
should screen unknown diving buddies for incompatibilities before
the dive begins.
There
should be no use of street drugs or alcohol
with diving.
Dental
- All cavities and
closed spaces should be managed prior to diving.
Drugs
- People on medications
that interfere with thinking, concentration, or cause sedation should
not dive.
Any
other condition not mentioned above, that may interfere with the
thinking or performance, may also limit diving.
Consider
not diving if you are unwell. Definitely do not dive with an ear
or sinus infection or any type of respiratory wheeze. One of the
main concerns about diving injuries is that many divers will minimize
their symptoms or deny them. It is important to have a plan if something
goes wrong, agree with your diving partner(s), and always follow
through.
Panic
and not following through with a simple backup plan are frequently
cited as a cause of accident and death.
PRE-DIVING
PLANNING
In
addition to proper certification, divers should be up to date in
their vaccinations if travelling, be counselled on malaria and traveller's
diarrhea prevention, be knowledgeable in the prevention of parasites
(from swimming in infected water), and seafood poisoning. Divers
should be knowledgeable in the water conditions where they are diving.
OTHER
DIVING CONCERNS
Divers
should all know CPR to initiate treatment for drowning (those who
have heart arrest from lack of oxygen) and near drowning (those
who experience a lack of oxygen without a cardiac arrest, but whom
also need to be watched carefully). Taking a CPR course at the same
time as diving certification could be very valuable. Divers should
also know the prevention and treatment of hyperthermia and hypothermia,
which can both occur in diving. An oxygen provider is also available
through D.A.N.
SOME
CONDITIONS RELATED TO BREATHING PRESSURIZED GAS
Nitrogen
Narcoses (Rapture
of the Deep) This usually occurs at depths of 30 feet or 40 meters
and is similar to feeling intoxicated. This may be hard to recognize
in beginners, so they should limit their depths when starting. Symptoms
may range from poor judgment, over confidence, inappropriate behavior
and even stupor or coma. The treatment is ascension, until symptoms
clear.
Central
nervous system oxygen toxicity
occurs when breathing mixed gas combinations (not regular air) at
greater depths. Symptoms include; nausea, dizziness, ringing ears,
altered vision, and even convulsion. If convulsing at depths, the
buddy should either reduce the oxygen partial pressure by switching
tanks or by gentle ascension will also decrease the oxygen pressure,
but managing an underwater seizure is difficult.
Managing
Underwater Seizures
If
warning symptoms occur, the diver should alert his buddy and
make a controlled ascent. If a seizure starts,
the
buddy should:
Get behind the diver and release
the buddy's weight belt (if victims are wearing a dry suit,
leave on as
this
affects the balance).
Leave the regulator in the victim's
mouth. If it is out, do not replace it.
Grasp the victim around the
chest, above the underwater breathing apparatus. If it's
difficult, use the
best
possible method to control.
Make controlled ascent to surface,
while keeping slight pressure on victim's chest to help
exhalation.
If additional buoyancy activates
victim's life jacket, do not drop your own weight belt or
use your own
life
jacket.
Inflate the victim's life jacket
at the surface if it has not done so.
Remove the victim's mouthpiece
and switch valve to SURFACE (for rebreather masks, as this
could
flood
the unit and weigh the victim down).
Signal for help.
Once the convulsions are over,
open victim's airway by lifting head back.
Mouth to mouth breathing if
necessary.
Transfer victim to dive medicine
facility.
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Reference:
U.S Navy Dive Manual Volume 2 Revised
CARBON
DIOXIDE TOXICITY
This
can happen under heavy exertion, by skip breathing (slow breathing),
or equipment failure. Symptoms include shortness of breath, headache,
nausea, dizziness, and confusion. Divers may develop rapid breathing,
muscle twitches, and unconsciousness. If breathlessness occurs,
divers should stop and rest until breathing returns to normal, if
not, then ascend.
LUNG
OVERPRESSURE SYNDROME
These
problems can occur independently or with an air embolism. They all
represent that the lung is injured and an embolism should be suspected.
Pneumothorax
usually is felt as chest pain or shortness of breath and occurs
when air enters the space between the lung and chest wall. This
problem worsens with time and treatment in a hospital with needle
or chest tube decompression is essential.
Mediastinal Emphysema
is when air becomes trapped in the space between the heart and the
lungs, and is felt as chest pain, shortness of breath and faintness.
This must also be followed in a hospital.
Subcutaneous Emphysema is
when escaped air from the lungs is trapped under the skin, usually
at the neck. A swelling and crackling is felt at the neck, with
a change of voice and difficult swallowing. This is a simple condition
and no treatment is required for it alone. Breathing 100% oxygen
will help resolve all types of over- pressure problem.
MOTION
SICKNESS
- should be anticipated
and medication should be used with caution since they all cause
some drowsiness. It is advisable to cancel a dive if sickness is
severe. Some will take meclizine 25 mg taken 2
hrs before dive (lasts 6-12h).
Some
illnesses require recompression therapy. They can be subtle but
should be acted on promptly if suspected.
DECOMPRESSION
ILLNESS
- is the broad term
to describe both air gas embolism (AGE) and decompression syndrome
(caused by nitrogen bubbles forming in the body).
S
igns and symptoms of AGE
include - any type of neurological problem, chest pain, personality
change, bloody froth, paralysis, convulsions, and death. Symptoms
can occur immediately after surfacing. Airplane travel can also
precipitate nitrogen bubble formation.
DAN
recommends not to fly 12 hours after the last non- stop diver.
The
U.S Air Force recommends 24hrs. Longer time is needed if the dive
is a complicated one.
Decompression
illness symptoms may also include fatigue, itch, pains in muscles
or joints, and a blotchy rash. Even muscular symptoms are worrisome
since bubbles could soon form in the nervous tissue. Once you suspect
Decompression illness the diver may be categorized as Emergent,
Urgent, and Timely.
TREATMENT
OF DIVE INJURIES
Emergent
cases are obviously
very sick. Begin CPR, and arrange evacuation. Check for foreign
bodies and place patient on back (if vomiting, turn onto side) 100%
oxygen should be supplied.
Isotonic
IV fluids without glucose should be given (this corrects dehydration
and reduces hemoconcentration) Give 1 litre over 30 minutes then
100-175 cc/hr.
If
trained, insert urine catheter to monitor urine output. After stabilization,
contact D.A.N for nearest chamber location. Transfer even if the
victim is improving. Take a detailed history, and evaluate neurological
status. If flying, pressurized aircraft is recommended.
In
cerebral arterial gas embolisms , having the head
slightly down, theoretically reduces further emboli towards the
brain. Some believe that this can also increase cerebral pressure.
A compromise is to keep the victim level with the body and tilted
to the left side. In Decompression sickness, muscular or other body
movements can dislodge venous emboli so patients should not move.
Near-drowning victims movements may redistribute fluid causing decreased
lung compliance. Patients with coexistent hypothermia should not
be jostled as this could precipitate a cardiac arrhythmia a in a
chilled heart.
Additional
treatments that have some evidence to support them, include giving
ASA (chewable baby aspirin may stops platelets accumulate around
bubbles and lidocaine (dose is the
same as for cardiac patients).
Lidocaine,
given in 1 or 2 boluses,
acts to increase cerebral blood flow and may prevent leukocyte activation.
Corticosteroids like decadron are sometimes also given but there
is less evidence of their usefulness.
Urgent
- These patients
are those with severe pain that has unchanged or become worse over
hours. Their neurological status appears normal. They should be
placed on 100% oxygen and given oral fluids. Contact DAN and arrange
a transfer.
Timely
- These patients
have vague complaints with abnormal sensations. Phone DAN and go
to the nearest medical facility.
Note
that any decompressive symptoms are distressing since they represent
nitrogen bubbles in parenchymal tissue (skin, muscle, nerve). Skin
and muscle can tolerate hypoxia well but nerve (spinal chord and
brain) cannot. Even in those divers only complaining of muscular
aches, their bodies are supersaturated with nitrogen that is starting
to precipitate out. Other critical tissues may be at risk as this
process continues.
Many
divers present days after their symptoms have started and by that
time the over saturation may be over. Symptoms may persist because
of past nerve damage so there is then no value in recommending hyperbaric
oxygen therapy. But if symptoms are evolving or unclear check with
DAN as they will help everyone who calls.
Dive
History - This
information is very helpful to D.A.N. Find out all dives (dive logs),
symptoms (onset and progressive), all first aid measures, description
of rashes, and any other medical information.
Neurological
history of injured divers should include:
Orientation (to name, place,
and time)
Check movement of eye following
a finger, check pupil size and vision
Look for symmetry of facial
muscles, facial sensation
Hearing (check ability to hear
rustled hair at each ear)
Watch the swallowing reflex
Check if tongue is straight
when stuck out
Check muscle strength - ask
patient to shrug shoulders against resistance, check the
strength of both arms and legs by asking the patient to
bend and extend while you resist movement. Look for symmetry
in all findings.
Check sensory perception to
light touch along left and right side of body.
Balance and coordinate. Have
divers walk heel to toe in a straight line if able, forward
and backward. Then stand with feet together, eyes closed
and palms held straight out. Check for ability to maintain
balance and be prepared to catch the person. Check the divers
ability to touch your finger and their own nose while you
move your hand.
By
doing these tests early and regularly at 30-60 min intervals,
valuable information about a neurological injury is obtained
while awaiting evacuation.
(Tests
1,7, and 9 are the most important)
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OTHER
PROBLEMS
Sinus
Squeeze - occurs as acute pain in sinuses.
Mask
Squeeze - painful pressure
build-up around mask.
Ear
Barotraumas - acute pain
in ear. Should not dive till healed. Inner ear disturbance should
be treated as a possible urgent referral to D.A.N (it might only
be a perilymph problem in the inner
ear but it cannot easily be differentiated from AGE or DCI.
Marine
animals and envenomations are beyond the scope of this talk but
should be treated by experienced people.
Suggested
Divers First Aid Kit (Basic)
Vial of rubbing alcohol (to
neutralize jelly fish stings)
Package of baking soda
Decadron 8mg or Prednisone 50mg
(for anaphylaxis)
Motion sickness tablets (meclizine,
phenergan, gravol, ginger)
Epipen
Mechanical suction device
Resusitube (combi-tube) with
training
Tourniquet (stop
bleeding)
Water-proof bandages
Rubber cement (to pull out spines,
envenomations)
Oxygen and training
First aid training
Pressure bandage to slow venom
from sea snakes and blue octopus bites
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Diving
in Cold Water is frequently performed by Commercia Divers and Salvage
Divers.Mr Rob Prichitt of the RCMP relates some of hs expierences
in arctic diving.
Diving
in a saline environment can be beow zero and even the divers wearing
thick diving dry suits became very cold quickly. Using a wet suit
would be impossible. Divers commonly expierenced numbing cold and
this cold easily be confused with the signs and symptoms of possible
decompression illness. Divers used to warn water diving have trouble
adjusting but divers used to moderate cold lake water diving such
as West Hawk Lake near Kenora, Ontario. One difference for arcic
diving from cold lake diving in a moderate climate is that the abient
air temperature when arctic diving wil be much colder. Arctic divers
must involve additional planning to involve rewarming after they
leave the cold arctic waters. Some form of active warming will be
necessary
A
good regulator that will function well in cold water is essential
as well as good seals on all valves. Testing all equipment beforehand
is essential.
CONCLUSIONS
The
Arctic nd subarctc marine environment presents many of the same
physiological stressers as diving in warmer waters. Specialized
preparation and equipment is strongly advised for those undertaking
to plan an Arctic dive.
Emergency
contacts for injured divers throughout World
Emergency
Telephone Numbers
DAN
Diving Emergency Numbers |
DAN
America |
+1.919.684.8111
or +1.919.684.4DAN(4326)
(-4DAN
accepts collect calls) |
DAN
America-Mexico |
+52-5-629-9800
code 9912935 |
DAN
Europe |
+41.1.1414
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DAN
Japan |
+81.3.3812.4999
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DAN
Southern Africa
(Outside
South Africa)
(Inside
South Africa) |
+27.11.242.0112
0800.020.111
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DAN
Southeast Asia-Pacific region
Diving
Emergency Services (DES) |
DES
Australia (within Australia) |
1.800.088.200
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DES
Australia (from overseas) |
+61.8.8212.9242
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DES
New Zealand
Singapore
Naval Medicine |
+64.9.445.8454
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Hyperbaric
Centre |
+65.750.5546
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DAN
S.E.A.P.-Philippines |
+63.2.815.9911
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REFERENCES:
Dive and Marine Medicine (3 rd
Conference. March 2000,
sponsored by The Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society.
Dive and Travel Medical Guide
Ed Thalmann, Editor,
Revised 1999, published by D.A.N.
Divers Alert Network (D.A.N.) is a non-profit
organization that gives information and advice to the general public.
They support diving research and have a 24-hour emergency phone
number (1-919-684-2948) for dive accidents. Members are eligible
for very good travel insurance packages while on dive-related vacations.
Bore, Alfred A and Davis, Jefferson
C. (1990) Pub W.B Saunders. Diving Medicine.
Edmonds (1978) Diving and Sub
Aquatic Medicine 2 nd Edition.
Divers Alert Network. Report
on Decompression Illness and Diving Fatalities 2000 Edition
.
Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society
Inc. (July 21, 1995) Published meeting . Are
Asthmatics Fit to Dive?
Rose, S (2001) International
Travel Health Guide 12 th Edition
Divers Alert Magazine Published by D.A.N.
D.A.N Website link: http://www.diversalertnetwork.org/
For your convenience we have prepared
downloadable pamphlets on Fitness to Dive and Scuba First Aid at
www.skylarkmedicalclinic.com

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