The Iceni
Medical Moderator
Dr Deco said
Decompression sickness requires the presence of two factors. These are:
[1.] An amount of dissolved gas in excess of what can be held in solution, at equilibrium, at that pressure, and
[2.] The presence of minute gas bubbles that can grow when the supersaturation exceeds the Laplace pressure (= contracting pressure resulting from surface tension).
The use of gas mixes and decompression profiles on ascent reduce the amount of inert gas in solution but there will always be micronuclei present and excess dissolved gas in the blood and tissues at any given time during and immediately after the ascent phase of a dive.
As I see it ALL diving predisposes to factor [1] the nature of the dive and individual variation affect factor [2] but there is a very real statistical probability of DCI following any dive.
I suspect there may indeed be a third factor. In any population there is a normal distrubution in risk associated with any activity. Those with a PFO will be in the minority at the high-risk end of the bell curve for DCI, the majority with other yet-to-be-identified minor risk factors in the middle and the relatively risk free individuals at the other end.
A reduction in both factors [1] and [2] will reduce the statistical risk of DCI close to zero but in the presence of any excess gas in solution the statistaical risk will never actually be zero. The only way to completely eliminate the risk of DCI is to have no excess inert gas in solution and of course this can only be retained by not diving.
One contributor compared the risks to crossing the road. This is a good analogy. If you elect to cross the road you run the risk of being hit by a passing car or truck. No matter how careful you are the risk is there but, of course, by chosing a pedestrian crossing, looking both ways, listening and taking great care you minimise the risk of being an RTA fatality.
I do not have the figures to hand but do know that the actuarial risk associated with the US Navy tables is greater than the "more conservative" BSAC '88 tables. So the risk of unexpected DCI is greater using US Navy tables (This risk is accepted as it is based on opertional requirements and the knowledge that recompression facilities are immediately available).
Statistically you are as likely to suffer a DCI hit using established tables with conservative diving as you are at winning a prize on the National Lottery. It is a lottery. "If you are not in it you cannot win it" so even if you undertake the most conservative diving you run a small but very real risk of DCI. If you are unlucky this 1 in 20,000 chance (say) will occur within your first few dives. This is statistics!
Current decompression tables are not based on theory alone they are based on empirical data collected over the years and have been shown to work reasonably well.
While we have a much greater understanding of the origins of DCI it has yet to be shown whether the newer theories will give rise to safer diving practices. For example, we know that small PFOs are present in about 20% of the population but a screening programme to detect these shunts is currently prohibitively expensive.
Diving is not a risk-free activity and a DCI hit does not ALWAYS imply bad diving practices. At least we are now beginning to realise that and divers are more ready to accept treatment than in the past, when a DCI was always considered to be a failing in the diver's practices - something to be ashamed of and to hide.
