Effect of oxygen tension and rate of pressure reduction during decompression on central gas bubbles |
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Authors: | Reinertsen, R. E. Flook, V. Koteng, S. Brubakk, A. O. |
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Abstract: | Reinertsen, R. E., V. Flook, S. Koteng, and A. O. Brubakk.Effect of oxygen tension and rate of pressure reduction duringdecompression on central gas bubbles. J. Appl.Physiol. 84(1): 351-356, 1998.Reduction inascent speed and an increase in theO2 tension in the inspired airhave been used to reduce the risk for decompression sickness. It haspreviously been reported that decompression speed andO2 partial pressure are linearly related for human decompressions from saturation hyperbaric exposures. The constant of proportionality K(K = rate/partial pressure of inspiredO2) indicates the incidence ofdecompression sickness. The present study investigated the relationshipamong decompression rate, partial pressure of inspiredO2, and the number of central gasbubbles after a 3-h dive to 500 kPa while breathing nitrox with an O2 content of 35 kPa. Weused transesophageal ultrasonic scanning to determine the number ofbubbles in the pulmonary artery of pigs. The results show that, for agiven level of decompression stress, decompression rate andO2 tension in the inspired air canbe traded off against each other by using pulmonary artery bubbles asan end point. The results also seem to confirm that decompressions thathave a high K value are morestressful. |
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