Please explain pulmonary barotrauma

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OE2X

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My son is an asthma suffer who wants to get into diving. I've done searches and have a fair understanding of the pros vs. cons of an asthmatic diving. I'm having a hard time gaining a complete understanding of what barotrauma is.

Thanks
 
Barotrauma is simply injuries caused by a pressure differntial.
Example: If you blow up a ballon until it pops the balloon has suffered a barotrauma.
 
Pulmonary barotrauma or pulmonary over inflation syndrome is an over expansion of air trapped within the lungs. This trapped air an be from either voluntary (holding your breath) or involuntary (scar tissue) blockage.

The trapped air expands on ascent due to Boyles law, when the gas expands far enough it can rupture the aveolar sacs. The air that escapes can:

Stay in the tissue in the mediastinal (behind the sternum) area of the chest MEDIASTINAL EMPHYSEMA

Travel upwards to the area around the neck and collar bones SUBCUTANIOUS EMPHYSEMA

Get into the circulatory system and be pumped out into the arterial circulation ARTERIAL GAS EMBOLISM

or become trapped betwen the plural lining of the lung and chest wall PNUEMOTHORAX
 
overexposed2X:
My son is an asthma suffer who wants to get into diving. I've done searches and have a fair understanding of the pros vs. cons of an asthmatic diving. I'm having a hard time gaining a complete understanding of what barotrauma is.

Thanks

Pulmonary barotrauma is trauma to the lung, caused by the pressure of expanding gas.

The volume of a gas is inversely proportional to the pressure to which it is subjected. (Boyle's Law.) As you descend deeper under water, you are subjected to progressively greater pressure. (Pressure at 10 metres below is twice that on the surface, pressure at 20 metres below is three times that at the surface, etc.)

Hence, the air which is delivered to you by your regulators needs to be at greater pressuer to enable to breathe properly.

Lets say you are at 10 metres and you take a breath. The air which you are breathing in is at twice the pressure of the air on the surface. Now, as you ascend, since the ambient water pressure is reducing, the air in your lungs will want to expand. (In accordance with Boyle's Law.) So it is necessary to breath out, or the expanding air may damage the lung.

If you do not breath out, or if for some reason the gas is not able to escape from the lung, the expanding air may tear the lung tissues. This pulmonary baro-trauma.

The concern with asthma is that if a person were to develop asthma at depth, the air breathed in at depth may not be able to escape, and thus would expand into the tissues of the lungs.

The dangers of pulmonary baro-trauma are:

1) Damage to lung tissue.
2) Air entering torn blood vessels, resulting in air embolism.
3) Air tearing through to the periphery of the lung tissue and into the chest cavity, resulting in a tension pneumothorax.
4) Air tearing through to the tissues and up into the neck, causing a condiition called "surgical emphysema".

The issue of scuba diving and asthma is a contentious one. There are theoretical reasons to believe that the dangers of diving with asthma are considerable. However, many asthmatics do dive, and they don't seem to be misproportionally represented in the fatality figures.

Most dive medical examiners would not necessarily exclude on the basis of asthma, provided the condition is well controlled. In cases of doubt, a "saline provocation test" is sometimes carried out, to see if the asthma can be induced through exposure to an aerosol spray of salt water. But that's getting on to another topic....
 
Barotrauma is a term which describes a cause of several different types of injuries. Barotraumas result due to a change in pressure.

If a diver continues to descend without equalizing pressure in the middle ear discomfort results. Continued descent results in a streching of the eardrum and eventual rupture of the tympanic membrane. Though rare the eardrum could be ruptured during ascent if a particularly stubborn reverse block occured.

Other types of barotrauma involve the lungs and these are typically the ones which are of most concern in asthmatic divers. The first rule of diving is to never hold your breath. Holding your breath during ascent traps air in your lungs. As you ascend the surrounding water pressure drops and the air in your lungs expands. This expanding air can stretch lung tissue to the point of rupture.

One of the concerns with asthma is that small pockets of air could become trapped even if the diver is not consciously holding his breath. This could result in a potentially life threatening pulmonary barotrauma.

There are other concerns regarding diving with asthma unrelated to barotrauma. Seek the advice of a qualified physician to help evaluate your son's circumstances.
 
jbd:
Barotrauma is simply injuries caused by a pressure differntial.
Example: If you blow up a ballon until it pops the balloon has suffered a barotrauma.

Sorry rmediver2002 - posts overlapped.
 
Thank you everyone. I appreciate this information. This is what we needed to know. There is a diving MD out here that we can take our son to for an evailuation. We are taking this very seriously as the negative consequences are harsh.
 
Glad to hear you are taking it seriously. The negative consequences are not simply harsh, the most negative consequence would be the death of your son. A high price to pay for a sport.
Ber
 
With the recent discussion on Asthma and diving, I decide to finally begin a project I’ve thought about for some time, providing a selection of quotes from sources on the subject. Since these quotes must be typed in, I may add some over time. I’m focusing on the issue of gas trapping because there is so much misinformation floating around. The conference spent more time on testing and treatment issues.

The Source I’m using is “Are Asthmatics Fit to Dive?”, the proceedings from an Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society Conference held on June 21, 1995, David H. Elliot Chairman and Editor. This is a source anyone seriously interested in asthma and diving should read, reprints are available here: http://www.uhms.org/Publications/publicat.htm.

Dr. Elliot: “… So it is important for us to have someone to review the subject who has no preconceived ideas about diving, and yet is familiar with water sports. Mark is eminent in the World Surf Lifesavers Association, editor of the Oxford Textbook of Sports Medicine in which he wrote the chapter on asthma; clinical director of medicine in a large postgraduate hospital and medical director of the British Olympic Medical Center.”

__________________________________________________ ___________________
From Why Asthmatics Should be Allowed to Dive, Mark Harries

“It has been agreed that gas can readily escape from the bronchial tree despite the increased intra-luminal secretions or airways narrowing encountered in the asthmatic diver, and so gas trapping should not prove a problem.”, [page 7]

“Conclusions
• Asthmatics who dive are at risk from exercise limitation, not peripheral gas trapping.” [Page 12]

__________________________________________________ ___________________

From: The Basis for the Pass/Fail Criteria use in Australia and New Zealand, D. F. Gorman (President of the South Pacific Undersea Medical Society)

“…will asthma or the treatment of asthma predispose the diver to a diving related illness? There is at least a theoretical increased risk of pulmonary barotrauma in asthmatics and some bronchodilators will impair the ability of the lungs to filter venous bubbles.” [page 31]

“It is possible that we’ve worried for too long about pulmonary barotrauma in asthmatics and overlooked the far more likely scenario of an asthmatic drowning on the surface. Certainly, local analyses of diving deaths show that asthmatics who die while diving usually do so by drowning on the water surface.” [page 32]

__________________________________________________ ___________________

From: The Case for allowing Asthmatics to Dive, Tom S. Neuman

“….in a magazine with a circulation of 38,000, there were 104 positive respondents, 22 wheezed daily, 9 dived within 1 hour of wheezing. Those who wheezed within one hour of diving logged 1,241 accident-free dives, and in the remaining asthmatics 12,864 safe dives were logged.” [page 40]

“Dr Farrell showed in his study that asthmatics have no statistically significant increase in dysbaric illness over the normal population. In his ongoing study of 200 asthmatic divers he also mentioned 30,000 accident-free dives with greater than 20 unscheduled free ascents without incident…” [page 40]

“In looking over 13 years of collecting mortality statistics and the university of Rhode Island only one death in 1300 could be attributed to asthma.” [page 40]

“….we’ve become somewhat more liberal about this because the key seems to be how they function. They either can do the exercise of they cannot do the exercise. The risk for barotrauma doesn’t seem to be there.” [page 42]

__________________________________________________ ___________________

From: The Case that Asthmatics Should Not Dive, Richard E. Moon

“Dr Farrell should be commended for doing for doing a prospective study…, but any such practicable study has the inherent problem that the asthmatics who dive are likely to be self-selected, lower risk individuals.” [page 46]

“What is the interpretation of these data? It is correct to say that there is no evidence for an increased risk of DCI in asthmatics who dive. However, it is not correct to conclude that there is no risk. To do so it would first be necessary to establish the confidence with which one can exclude such a relationship.” [page 48]

“There are theoretical reasons why gas trapping could occur in asthmatics and cause pulmonary barotrauma and gas embolism during ascent from a dive.” [page 48]

__________________________________________________ ___________________


That’s enough for now, remember that this conference was held in 1995, the diving community seems to be rather slow in disseminating the updated view of asthma and diving.

Ralph
 
"surgical emphysema".


20 years in medicine and I have never heard this term. Are you describing subcutanious emphysema?
 
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