Dr Deco
Contributor
- Messages
- 2,384
- Reaction score
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- # of dives
- I just don't log dives
Hello WaterDawg:
As you have read, the blood is not really thinned, that is, made less viscous. As for the change in surface tension, I doubt much of a change with aspirin. There is not really any evidence that surface tension changes among divers nor that it has any relationship to susceptibility to DCS. That is more a pet theory of mine (and a few others), but there is not any proof other than the Walder study of 1948 which people do not seem to be able to replicate. :06:
Dr Deco :doctor:
Readers, please note the next class in Decompression Physiology :1book:
http://wrigley.usc.edu/hyperbaric/advdeco.htm
As you have read, the blood is not really thinned, that is, made less viscous. As for the change in surface tension, I doubt much of a change with aspirin. There is not really any evidence that surface tension changes among divers nor that it has any relationship to susceptibility to DCS. That is more a pet theory of mine (and a few others), but there is not any proof other than the Walder study of 1948 which people do not seem to be able to replicate. :06:
Dr Deco :doctor:
Readers, please note the next class in Decompression Physiology :1book:
http://wrigley.usc.edu/hyperbaric/advdeco.htm