Wow! I fly out of town for a couple of days and this thread really takes off.
First of all, I agree completely with all of the excellent information provided to this thread by Duke Dive Medicine.
My thoughts --
1. Probably 25% of the population has a PFO. It is NOT a disease, it is a "normal variant". All of us have a PFO as a fetus and a newborn. It directs blood coming from the placenta over to the left side of the heart, bypassing the lungs which are collapsed and full of fluid, to then be pumped to the body. When we are born and the lungs open up, this flap closes and in about 75% of people it completely seals over the first couple of years of life. However, in 25% of people it never completely seals.
2. The problem with DCS is the inert bubble load, not the PFO. Anything a diver does to decrease his or her inert gas load will lower the risk of DCS. Shallower dives, shorter dives, fewer dives per day, diving nitrox on air profiles, long safety stops, etc are all very effective approaches in decreasing the risk of DCS in any diver whether or not there is a PFO. In decompression diving the risk of DCS (with our without PFO) is higher due to the higher inert gas load, but the same principles apply. Fewer dives per day, conservative gradient factors, doing extra decompression beyond what is required, etc. should all be helpful to some degree.
3. Yes, PFOs increase the risk of DCS by something like 5-fold but this is an increase in the RELATIVE risk. The ABSOLUTE risk of DCS is still very small with a PFO. For argument's sake, if the risk of DCS in recreational diving is about 2 episodes per 10,000 dives and a PFO increases this risk 5-fold, the ABSOLUTE risk of DCS in recreational divers with a PFO is still only 1 per 1000 dives. PFO closure is a relatively low risk procedure (especially compared to a lot of other procedures I do on a daily basis) but the risk of some sort of complication is still 2-3% or so -- bleeding, palpitations, etc. Hence, the medical community DOES NOT recommend assessing divers for PFO and definitely DOES NOT recommend routine closure of PFOs.
4. PFOs are associated with certain types, but not all types of DCS -- cerebral, spinal, skin bends, and inner ear. If someone is having, say, recurrent joint (type 1) bends after diving and is found to have a PFO, the two are "true, true, and unrelated". That diver should NOT have a PFO closure
5. Though arguably controversial, PFO closure in SELECTED INDIVIDUALs is REASONABLE in my opinion. Those divers would be ones that do not want to give up diving, are already diving as conservatively as they can, and have had recurrent "unexpected" DCS, especially severe neurologic cases. I always discuss with the diver three options --
a. Stopping diving
b. Conservative diving
c. PFO closure
6. PFO closure DOES NOT prevent DCS. The best case scenario after PFO closure is that the diver has his or her risk of DCS reduced to the baseline risk of a diver without a PFO and this would only occur if the PFO contributed to the symptoms which is never completely known. It's a "best guess" based on history, exam, echo results, etc.
7. The screening test of choice (not just my opinion but by consensus statements from Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society and South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society) is a transthoracic (from the chest wall) echocardiogram with injection of agitated saline through a peripheral vein ("bubble study"). Yes, transesophageal echo is more likely to detect a small PFO than is a transthoracic echo but it is much more invasive in that it requires intravenous sedation and a probe being passed down the esophagus. I reserve transesophageal echo for divers in whom I REALLY think they have a PFO contributing to their symptoms but the transthoracic echo is of poor quality. As mentioned above, a transcranial doppler (agitated saline injected into a peripheral vein and then a probe positioned over the temporal artery) can detect right to left shunting of bubbles but cannot localize where the problem is -- intracardiac, intrapulmonary, etc. For this reason, a transthoracic echo is felt to be a better screening tool.
Dr. Petar Denoble and I are still recruiting for a DAN sponsored study prospectively following divers with PFO and DCS, whether or not they opted for closure of the PFO. The link for more information is
www.dan.org/pfostudy. We would greatly appreciate anyone and everyone that would like to participate.