Literature DB >> 23258455

The incidence of decompression illness in 10 years of scientific diving.

Michael R Dardeau1, Neal W Pollock, Christian M McDonald, Michael A Lang.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The American Academy of Underwater Science (AAUS) constitutes the single largest pool of organizations with scientific diving programmes in North America. Members submit annual summaries of diving activity and any related incidents.
METHODS: All diving records for a 10-year period between January 1998 and December 2007 were reviewed. Incidents were independently classified or reclassified by a four-person panel with expertise in scientific diving and diving safety using a previously published protocol. Subsequent panel discussion produced a single consensus classification of each case.
RESULTS: A total of 95 confirmed incidents were reported in conjunction with 1,019,159 scientific dives, yielding an overall incidence of 0.93/10,000 person-dives. A total of 33 cases were determined to involve decompression illness (DCI), encompassing both decompression sickness and air embolism. The incidence of DCI was 0.324/10,000 person-dives, substantially lower than the rates of 0.9-35.3/10,000 published for recreational, instructional/guided, commercial and/or military diving.
CONCLUSIONS: Scientific diving safety may be facilitated by a combination of relatively high levels of training and oversight, the predominance of shallow, no-decompression diving and, possibly, low pressure to complete dives under less than optimal circumstances.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23258455

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diving Hyperb Med        ISSN: 1833-3516            Impact factor:   0.887


  8 in total

1.  Decompression illness and other injuries in a recreational dive charter operation.

Authors:  Marion Hubbard; F Michael Davis; Kate Malcolm; Scott J Mitchell
Journal:  Diving Hyperb Med       Date:  2018-12-24       Impact factor: 0.887

2.  A survey of scuba diving-related injuries and outcomes among French recreational divers.

Authors:  David Monnot; Thierry Michot; Emmanuel Dugrenot; François Guerrero; Pierre Lafère
Journal:  Diving Hyperb Med       Date:  2019-06-30       Impact factor: 0.887

3.  The risks of scuba diving: a focus on Decompression Illness.

Authors:  Jennifer Hall
Journal:  Hawaii J Med Public Health       Date:  2014-11

4.  Decompression illness in Finnish technical divers: a follow-up study on incidence and self-treatment.

Authors:  Laura J Tuominen; Sofia Sokolowski; Richard V Lundell; Anne K Räisänen-Sokolowski
Journal:  Diving Hyperb Med       Date:  2022-06-30       Impact factor: 1.228

Review 5.  Wilderness medicine.

Authors:  Douglas G Sward; Brad L Bennett
Journal:  World J Emerg Med       Date:  2014

6.  A combined three-dimensional in vitro-in silico approach to modelling bubble dynamics in decompression sickness.

Authors:  C Walsh; E Stride; U Cheema; N Ovenden
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 4.118

7.  Quantification of cell-bubble interactions in a 3D engineered tissue phantom.

Authors:  C Walsh; N Ovenden; E Stride; U Cheema
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-07-24       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  Acute Effects on the Human Peripheral Blood Transcriptome of Decompression Sickness Secondary to Scuba Diving.

Authors:  Kurt Magri; Ingrid Eftedal; Vanessa Petroni Magri; Lyubisa Matity; Charles Paul Azzopardi; Stephen Muscat; Nikolai Paul Pace
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 4.566

  8 in total

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