Gas phase formation and Doppler monitoring during decompression with elevated oxygen

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Gas phase formation and Doppler monitoring during decompression with elevated oxygen

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Title: Gas phase formation and Doppler monitoring during decompression with elevated oxygen
Author: Powell, MR; Thoma, W; Fust, HD; Cabarrou, P
Abstract: Subjects in 150 man-dives were precordially monitored with a 5-MHz Doppler ultrasound bubble detector. These measurements were made during a series of dives conducted to test decompression tables that utilize changes of breathing mixtures and a time-average PIO2 of 1.9 b during the entire decompression period. Precordially detected bubbles at depth were predictive for limb pain in divers approximately 50percent of the time; however, 70percent of the divers encountered bends problems in the absence of precordially detectable bubbles. Thus, while the presence of venous return bubbles can be associated with a risk factor for bends, the Doppler method appears to lack the specificity needed for personal dive monitoring. During the oxygen-breathing portions of the decompression individual bubbles could not be detected precordially. The amplitude of the Doppler-detected pulmonary artery flow sound increased, however, and possibly indicated the presence of numerous microbubbles. *Decompression Decompression Sickness/diagnosis Diving Human Microcirculation *Monitoring, Physiologic Oxygen Risk *Ultrasonography
Description: Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc. (http://www.uhms.org )
URI: PMID: 6636346
http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/2966
Date: 1983

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  • Undersea Biomedical Research Journal
    The Undersea Baromedical Research journal was published by the Undersea Medical Society, Inc. (now the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society) quarterly from 1974 to 1992 when the name changed to the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine Journal.

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