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Journal Article

Citation

James PB. Schweiz. Z. Sportmed. 1989; 37(1): 45-48.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1989, Editions Medecine et Hygiene)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2658043

Abstract

The formulation of decompression procedures has generally been based on the observation that divers can be decompressed without stoppages to surface, from steady-state exposures of about twice the atmospheric pressure. Because decompression sickness rarely develops from this "no-stop decompression", it has been assumed that no gas is liberated. It is therefore assumed, in the calculation of the majority of decompression tables, that using a 2:1 decompression ratio allows the additional gas load from the hyperbaric exposure to be transported to the lungs in solution. Ultrasonic scanning and Doppler techniques have shown that this is not the case. Decompression tables must therefore be formulated so as to take into account the presence of gas, the critical diameter of circulating bubbles and the inherent unsaturation introduced by oxygen.


Language: en

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