| Literature DB >> 24472678 |
Abstract
Exposure to the underwater environment for occupational or recreational purposes is increasing. As estimated, there are around 7 million divers active worldwide and 300,000 more divers in Korea. The underwater and hyperbaric environment presents a number of risks to the diver. Injuries from these hazards include barotrauma, decompression sickness, toxic effects of hyperbaric gases, drowning, hypothermia, and dangerous marine animals. For these reasons, primary care physicians should understand diving related injuries and assessment of fitness to dive. However, most Korean physicians are unfamiliar with underwater and hyperbaric medicine (UHM) in spite of scientific and practical values.From occupational and environmental medicine (OEM) specialist's perspective, we believe that UHM should be a branch of OEM because OEM is an area of medicine that deals with injuries caused by physical and biological hazards, clinical toxicology, occupational diseases, and assessment of fitness to work. To extend our knowledge about UHM, this article will review and update on UHM including barotrauma, decompression illness, toxicity of diving gases and fitness for diving.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24472678 PMCID: PMC3923352 DOI: 10.1186/2052-4374-25-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Occup Environ Med ISSN: 2052-4374
Pressure change and lung volume with depth
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 100 |
| 33 | 10 | 2 | 50 |
| 66 | 20 | 3 | 33 |
| 99 | 30 | 4 | 25 |
| 132 | 40 | 5 | 20 |
| 165 | 50 | 6 | 16.7 |
fsw (feet sea water), ata (atmospheres absolute pressure).
Differential diagnosis of decompression illness
| Otorhinolaryngology | Inner-ear barotrauma |
| | Middle ear or sinus barotrauma with cranial nerve compression |
| Neurology | Acute coincidental neurological disorder (stroke, seizure, subarachnoid hemorrhage) |
| Guillain-Barre syndrome | |
| | Migraine |
| Multiple sclerosis | |
| Hematology | Porphyria |
| Pulmonalogy | Immersion pulmonary edema |
| | Pneumothorax |
| Psychology | Acute psychosis |
| Other | Contaminated diving gas and oxygen toxic effects |
| Musculoskeletal Strains or trauma sustained before, during, or after diving | |
| Near drowning and hypoxic brain injury | |
| | Seafood toxin poisoning |
| | Ingestion |
| | Ciguatera |
| | Puffer fish |
| Paralytic shellfish |
Figure 1Recompression chamber. (A) Multiplace recompression chamber in Boryeong public health center, (B) Emergency treatment in a multiplace chamber.
Figure 2US navy treatment 6. Three pure oxygen breathing cycles of 20 min duration each at 60 fsw are followed by subsequent oxygen cycles at 30 fsw. Intermittent 5-min air breathing pauses prevent oxygen toxicity. Total treatment time is 285 min.
List of contraindication to hyperbaric exposures in OSHA standards
| Neurology | History of seizure disorder other than early febrile convulsions |
| | Chronic inability to equalize sinus and/or middle ear pressure |
| Otorhinolaryngology | Meniere’s disease |
| | Vestibular end-organ destruction |
| Hematology | Hemoglobinopathies |
| Pulmonalogy | Cystic or cavitary disease of the lungs |
| Obstructive or restrictive lung disease | |
| Pneumothorax | |
| Cardiology | Cardiac abnormalities (e.g., pathologic heart block, valvular disease, intraventricular conduction defects other than isolated right bundle branch block, angina pectoris, arrhythmia, coronary artery disease) |
| Other | Malignancies (active) unless treated and without recurrence for 5 yr |
| Impaired organ function caused by alcohol or drug use | |
| Conditions requiring continous medication for control | |
| (e.g., antihistamines, steroids, barbiturates, mood altering drugs, or insulin) |
Recommended times away from diving
| Simple DCI (limb pain, skin “bend”, lymphatic swelling, headache, fatigue etc.) | Uncomplicated recovery | 24 hours |
| | Recurrence/relapse | 7 days |
| | Altered sensation in limbs only | 7 days |
| Neurological DCI | Other (audiovestibular, motor, pulmonary etc.) | 28 days |