Bubbletrubble
Contributor
@Plane Trouble: I think one of the most even-handed, reasonable takes on PFOs in the context of diving is a short essay written in 2004 by Bove and Wood. The article is hosted on the DAN website, so check it out.I see your point completely. What are your thoughts on Patent Foramen Ovale conditions? I mean apparently up to 20% of the adult population has the condition from birth (in varying degrees of severity) and that the only way to really test for it accurately is using Bubble Echocardiography (which hardly anyone is going to have done). If kept conservatively within a NDL in relatively shallow water (less than 50ft) even with a Patent Foramen Ovale, do you feel the risk of decompression stress is very high?
In general, I think that recreational divers are more worried about PFOs than they need to be. It sounds like a really serious condition involving a very important internal organ (the heart), so people tend to freak out over it. Assuming that the estimated prevalence of PFO in the general population is similar to that in the diving population (10 - 20%), if PFOs alone were responsible for a high percentage of DCS hits, I'd expect the incidence of DCS per dive in recreational divers to be much higher than the observed 0.005-0.08%. I see that Leadturn SD has similar thoughts on the matter.

Recreational divers should be far more concerned with staying physically fit, remaining well-hydrated, exercising good buoyancy control, moderating decompression stress (bubble load) by not coming close to NDLs, not ascending too quickly, and doing extended safety stops. For tech divers, commercial divers, and scuba instructors (people exposed to significantly higher decompression stress), PFO screening might prove to be interesting...especially if there's a history of probable DCS. I understand that there are cardiologists out there implanting the PFO occluders in divers. To evaluate the efficacy of this intervention, it's critical that the divers: (a) continue to dive the same profiles post-procedure as they did prior to treatment and (b) do a good job of following up with investigators so that outcomes can be tallied. Unfortunately, I suspect that condition (a) will not be met because it's human nature to want to dive more conservatively after a DCS incident. What really needs to be done is a long-term, blinded, prospective study on a population of divers subjected to high decompression stress (commercial divers, tech divers, scuba instructors, etc.). All participants would be screened for PFO. Of those with PFO, study participants would be stratified into a treatment group (PFO occlusion) and control group (sham procedure). Then, they should keep track of their dive profiles (using something like the Reefnet Sensus Ultra) and report back to investigators annually with that dive data and whether or not they experienced any DCS incidents. In an ideal world, both groups would be asked to dive identical profiles, but that kind of demand would not be logistically possible. Having such control in a human study is rather rare. With rodent studies, it's a totally different story.
Going forward, hopefully we'll be able to better track this potential risk factor since the diving public is now hyper-aware of it. I guess that's one advantage of divers obsessing about PFOs.