Or @Duke Dive MedicineWhere is @Dr Simon Mitchell when you need him?
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Or @Duke Dive MedicineWhere is @Dr Simon Mitchell when you need him?
Nope, NOT buying it now. Freedivers go down way over 100 or 200 feet and then shoot to the surface and don't get it, but a scuba diver goes to 15 feet for 20 seconds is going to get all these bubbles? Makes zero sense.
Of course no one could recommend doing this experiment!If I have relatively empty lungs at 20meters, hold my breath, then ascend to 10meters, would my lungs physically expand (and therefore I would feel my diaphragm move).
AGE has occurred in many experimental and clinical scenarios where there is little or no inert gas loading that would drive venous bubble formation, so the lungs are the only possible source of gas.
At a simplistic level, one could say that its not a huge intellectual leap from over-expanded alveoli rupturing their gas content into adjacent blood vessels which also get damaged.
Getting back to the original issue in this thread, in theory, lungs that are partially filled with compressed gas (they are never truly empty) should be able to tolerate some degree of ascent and pressure reduction. However, biology always throws up unexpected twists. For example, and to some extent unproven speculation, in near empty lungs, some of the small airways leading to alveoli may collapse. Thus, during subsequent ascent, if the gas in those alveoli becomes functionally trapped and if the airways don't open quickly enough as that gas expands, the alveoli could get damaged leading to pulmonary barotrauma
Hello,Can you elaborate on how the lungs can tolerate some degree of pressure reduction when factoring in the diaphragm? I.e. I expect that lung expansion caused by pressure reduction would either a) be prevented fully or partially due to the diaphragm not contracting, and therefore impeding the lungās ability to expand or b) be sufficient enough to force the diaphragm to ācontractā to allow the lungs to physically expand.
Grateful for your response, especially considering how useless a surprisingly large portion of responses here have been.
Gelirfella:That said, Iām surprised we donāt see this more in hospitalized patients who suffer overexpansion injuries from positive pressure ventilation.