Thanks for the response. Maybe it would have to be broken into Type 1 and Type 2 DCS. I agree that Type 1 would be very difficult to get data on.
However, Type 2 involving chamber rides should be doable.
My understanding is the chamber people want to see the patient's computer. I would assume they then document this data in the chart.
In my short diving career I personally know 2 people with Type 2 DCS needing multiple chamber rides who had "undeserved" hits. If I know 2 people there must be many more.
Recently an experienced SBer mentioned he now dives no closer to NDL than 20 minutes or something to exercise extreme caution.
So it might be helpful for the diving community if data could be developed to say only 1% of Type 2 DCS involving chamber rides were in dives that the diver stayed 20 minutes away from NDL.
To be fair even my sample of 2 people had an added complexity that would have to be taken into account. One had a workup showing no underlying risk factor and one had a large PFO (since closed and back diving).
There's (nearly) an infinite combination of dive profiles and divers, not to mention the option to change settings like gradient factors on computers, which means that it would be difficult to standardize the data to analyze it, if we did have access to it (more on that below). '20 minutes away from NDL' can mean a lot of different things. About the closest we can come is the research on printed dive tables. We can also do probabilistic modeling for theoretical printed-table-based dives based on data derived from known military dives and outcomes (DCS vs non-DCS). To my knowledge, most computer algorithms have at least some roots that probabilistic modeling.
Anecdotally, we find that a lot of divers we see with DCS tend to have dove their computers to the edge of the algorithm, i.e. straight to whatever the computer says is the NDL, but again, that's hard to standardize given that computers track dives in real-time and many of them have parameters that can be adjusted. We do have data that suggest that in general, the deeper the dive and the longer the bottom time, the higher the probability of DCS, which is counterintuitive - one would think that the tables would control for pDCS with deeper and longer dives, but that was not the case when we looked at it.
From my own experience, divers with suspected DCS almost never bring their computers to the chamber, usually for fear of being judged. That pretty much squashes the idea of doing research on it. If they do bring their computer, the chamber facilities typically don't have the software or patch cables to retrieve and display the profiles. Even if we could retrieve the profiles, that would not influence clinical decision-making for treatment of DCS, which is based strictly on symptoms.
We tend to avoid the words "deserved" and "undeserved" nowadays and instead use "explained" and "unexplained". Depending on the profile, your example of the diver with DCS and a large PFO could be considered an explained hit.
<edit: neglected to check the date on this thread, lots of responses, including my own, that already stated the above!>
Best regards,
DDM