rcohn
Guest
Dr Deco,
I asked a followup question regarding your comment in the Reverse Dive Profiles thread which was lost in the noise, so I'm reposting it here.
I was wondering about the distribution of the reformed micronuclei. It would seem that an activity such as walking would create micronuclei in the joints from tribonucleation and prehaps in the muscles. I've heard speculation that the damaging nuclei are more likely to come from the lipid tissues or in/around nerves such as the spinal column. Do you have any thoughts on how micronuclei distribution would affect the risk of DCS? Do the micronuclei travel from one generation site to spread throughout the body?
Thanks.
Ralph
I asked a followup question regarding your comment in the Reverse Dive Profiles thread which was lost in the noise, so I'm reposting it here.
Why does it not appear that shallow-to-deep is bad? It is my feeling that the answer lies in regeneration of tissue micronuclei during the activity in the surface interval. Thus, any nuclei that you might loose in the first compress/depress cycle will be reformed during you normal surface activities and walking about. Much is probably regained simply by climbing the ladder during reboarding the dive boat. If this hypothesis is correct, then obviously the order of the dive is irrelevant, and the interdive activity is more relevant. This activity, as I have stated on several occasions in this FORUM, should involve limb movement but not straining or heavy lifting with arms, legs, or spine.
I was wondering about the distribution of the reformed micronuclei. It would seem that an activity such as walking would create micronuclei in the joints from tribonucleation and prehaps in the muscles. I've heard speculation that the damaging nuclei are more likely to come from the lipid tissues or in/around nerves such as the spinal column. Do you have any thoughts on how micronuclei distribution would affect the risk of DCS? Do the micronuclei travel from one generation site to spread throughout the body?
Thanks.
Ralph