Literature DB >> 10368357

Predicting risk of decompression sickness in humans from outcomes in sheep.

R Ball1, C E Lehner, E C Parker.   

Abstract

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-exponential, probabilistic modeling to test this hypothesis. Scaling the response parameters of this model between species (without accounting for body mass), while estimating tissue-compartment kinetic parameters from combined human and sheep data, predicts combined risk better, based on log likelihood, than do separate sheep and human models, a combined model without scaling, and a kinetic-scaled model. These findings provide a practical tool for estimating DCS risk in humans from outcomes in sheep, especially in decompression profiles too risky to test with humans. This model supports the hypothesis that species of similar body mass have similar DCS risk.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10368357     DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1999.86.6.1920

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  2 in total

Review 1.  Kinetic and dynamic models of diving gases in decompression sickness prevention.

Authors:  Robert Ball; Sorell L Schwartz
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 6.447

2.  Relevance of postmortem radiology to the diagnosis of fatal cerebral gas embolism from compressed air diving.

Authors:  A J Cole; D Griffiths; S Lavender; P Summers; K Rich
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  2006-02-17       Impact factor: 3.411

  2 in total

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