Thanks for your response in this thread. Given no comparitive human study has demonstrated benefit in deep stops, I'm curious why you believe the ideal strategy "is almost certainly not as far as raw Buhlmann". Buhlmann's work was based on real dives, and had some rational method to determine the parameters he did. Why do you suspect he could have been neglecting the importance of protecting the fast tissues.
I ask that because I'm interested, not stating I disagree with your suspicion. When I can dive again I can assure you mu gf lo will be lower than my gf hi.
Hi Elmo,
Good question. "Almost certainly" may be too strong, and I was relying on the following phrase "but that information is still to come" to provide important context around the uncertainty. Having said that, Buhlmann's testing was not exhaustive, and focused on depth ranges that were mainly shallower or (in a few cases) deeper than than the 60 - 90m depth range typically of interest to technical divers. David and I mention this in the paper I have uploaded with reference to Buhlmann's original work [1]. There is a slightly fuller discussion in a recent book chapter [2]. I am mindful that although the available evidence is signalling that we should avoid over-emphasizing deep stops, the fundamental principle behind them is not stupid, and every decompression has to have a deepest stop; we just have not figured out quite yet "how deep is optimal". Call it intuition as much as anything else, but I suspect that GF 100:- is probably too much supersaturation in faster tissues early in an ascent from a deepish technical dive. But I don't know for sure.
Hi @Dr Simon Mitchell
How do you feel about other markers for decompression stress other than bubbles, the chemokines obtained in the Spisni study for example? Are there other markers that would prove valuable?
Hi scubadada,
Unfortunately there is no well validated biomarker for decompression stress. The best characterized index is venous gas emboli (VGE), but as you point out there are other markers such as chemokines / inflammatory markers (including [possibly] microparticles), and certain physiological parameters like flow mediated dilation of blood vessels. But they are all fairly "soft". Notwithstanding the acknowledged poor positive predictive value for VGE in 'diagnosing' DCS, VGE remain the strongest surrogate for decompression stress we currently have to work with.
Simon
1. Doolette DJ, Mitchell SJ. Recreational technical diving part 2. Decompression from deep technical dives. Diving Hyperb Med 43, 96-104, 2013
2. Mitchell SJ, Doolette DJ. Extreme scuba diving medicine. In: Felletti F (ed). Extreme Sports Medicine. New York, Springer Publishers, 313-333, 2017