Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
Because I dive nitrox strictly on air limits - the tracking of the O2 is just in case, although I'm never doing more than 2 dives a day anymore so it really isn't totally necessary. The computer set to actual O2 setting also serves as a back-up. My computer has various settings in re conservatism - and mine are both set to the most conservative profiles already.
I know it's not practical for everyone, but I always recommend having a back-up computer. I can't tell you how many people's computers crap out on them in the middle of a dive week - either battery, flooding or some other problem then they want to rent a computer. Sorry to say folks, but we can't rent you a computer once you've started diving, unless you take a full 24 hours off first - it has no idea what your previous profiles were.
For me, the TYPE of DCS that occurs with this lesion is what makes it scary. Although (for unknown reasons) skin bends is a lot more common in this group, so is neurologic catastrophe.
Hopefully @Dr Simon Mitchell will not mind my reposting his response to this study from another thread ...Seems that neurologic DCS might cause skin bends: https://thedivelab.wordpress.com/20...result-of-brain-lesions-caused-by-gas-bubbles
Hello Islanddream.
I agree with DDM that there is no science behind these decisions.
My personal view is that if all you had was the rash, with no other manifestations, then a 6 month wait to dive is excessively conservative. As DDM has implied, the cutis marmorata form of rash is generally viewed as more "serious" but this perception arises because it is more frequently associated with other more serious symptoms (particularly spinal DCS) than the hive-like rash that he mentions. It is not that the cutis marmorata rash per se will harm you. If all you experienced was the rash with no other symptoms, then we would still view this as a mild episode of DCS. Put another way, the significance of cutis marmorata is that when we see it we are more alert to the possibility that more serious symptoms might arise. If no more serious sumptoms arise then the rash itself is essentially harmless.
We would normally advise divers in the latter situation (cutis marmorata rash but no other symptoms) to have a month off diving. This advice is not based on science, but there is a lot of experience with it, and there is no signal in our experience that it is insufficient time. Having said that, even a diver who waits six months or a year could suffer another event the next time they go diving just on the basis of bad luck. So whenever diving physicians give this sort of advice it is always heavily contextualised with a clear statement that there are NEVER any guarantees that there will not be a repeat event, no matter how long you wait. It follows that the decision to dive again, and when to dive, has to be made by you and you must take responsibility for that decision.
DDM mentioned the study which has shown that pigs may exhibit cutis marmorata after brain arterial gas embolism. Unfortunately this study has led to a fairly uncritical acceptance that cutis marmorata is (or may be) caused in this way in human divers. The truth is that a cutis marmorata appearance of the skin may be caused in many ways, and one of them is a significant adrenergic (think of it as an intense fight or flight) response. This can occur in a variety of medical settings. For example we see a cutis marmorata-like rash in illnesses like septic shock, or shock of any cause for that matter. Non diving brain injury can also cause it - we see it sometimes in brain bleeding events. It is not surprising therefore that cutis marmorata may be seen in severe stroke-like events caused by bubbles (as in the pigs in the study).
Two things get overlooked in conversations about this study. First, the pigs in the study were anaesthetised. Second, the doses of air used to elicit the cutis marmorata response would have produced significant stroke like symptoms if the pigs were awake. But in the vast majority of cases of cutis marmorata in human divers we don't see symptoms of brain injury. Indeed, it is very common to see cases like yours with no other symptoms at all. Thus, it seems that the dose of arterial gas required to elicit the response in pigs is simply not encountered in the vast majority of human cases. It certainly cannot be concluded on the basis of this study that human divers with cutis marmorata must have suffered from arterial gas embolism.
A proponent of the brain embolism hypothesis might argue that maybe you don't need such large doses of gas going to the brain to elicit the response in humans. But this reasoning can also be challenged. Humans undergoing strongly positive bubble contrast echo studies for PFO inevitably have their cerebral circulation showered with bubbles of relevant size to those which "often" enter the arterial circulation from the veins after diving. This happens every day in cardiology suites where PFO tests take place. Sometimes we even see transient cerebral symptoms after such studies, but we NEVER see cutis marmorata. If "sub-clinical" cerebral arterial bubble exposure were the cause of cutis marmorata in human divers, we would expect to see it more often in strongly positive PFO tests, but we never do.
I am not dismissing the study out of hand. It seems likely that cutis marmorata could be seen after serious arterial gas embolism in humans, but this would be accompanied by stroke like brain injuries, and the majority of cutis marmorata cases in divers (who do not exhibit such injuries) do not seem to be caused in that way.
Simon M
I'd say this is an overkill, as useless as diving air profile while breathing EAN.Sorry to say folks, but we can't rent you a computer once you've started diving, unless you take a full 24 hours off first - it has no idea what your previous profiles were.
How long would you take off before starting with a fresh computer?I'd say this is an overkill, as useless as diving air profile while breathing EAN.
Zero.How long would you take off before starting with a fresh computer?
Must be some very special place, with zero chances of being run over by a boatMy favorite dive site in world consists of diving 3 hours at 5ft.