I just finished taking a Med Diver course through Dive Rescue Int'l. When the class turned to recompression treatment, I learned something that startled me and I'm wondering if anyone can offer an explanation. In several of the navy treatment tables, people are put on 100% O2 when the chamber is pressurized to SIXTY FEET. That's coming up on 3 ata, and since it's pure oxygen of course your PO2 is your ata. How can that be? The NOAA nitrox tables are based on never exceeding a PO2 of 1.6, and I believe recreational nitrox tables even drop that to 1.4, due to the threat of CNS O2 toxicity. But here we're sticking people in a chamber at 2.8 or so. I know people have differing tolerances to O2, but isn't this at a level when most folks would convulse and have seizures? Also, I know the navy tables incorporate 5-minute normoxic air breaks as a preventative, but how can that be enough when you're at 100% for 20-minute intervals, for a total pure O2 time at 60 feet of 40-60 minutes? I don't know any diver who would intentionally go down to 60 feet and breathe off pure O2, even for a minute.
What say you, scubaboard? I asked the instructor of course, and he had to call up a dive doc in Cleveland (that's where he was from) who runs one of their hyperbaric chambers. After some discussion with them and other divers I have a few theories, but I'd like to hear from all the experience on this board before I go speculating. Neither the instructor nor the dive doc could say for sure why these navy tables work-- they'd never thought about it and had never been asked this question before....
What say you, scubaboard? I asked the instructor of course, and he had to call up a dive doc in Cleveland (that's where he was from) who runs one of their hyperbaric chambers. After some discussion with them and other divers I have a few theories, but I'd like to hear from all the experience on this board before I go speculating. Neither the instructor nor the dive doc could say for sure why these navy tables work-- they'd never thought about it and had never been asked this question before....