Kendall Raine
Contributor
I reread the thread about 100 v. 80/20 and no one mentioned the importance of the toggling effect directly. The toggling effect is George Irvine's term for air break. Specifically, in the WKPP deco procedures, this is not an air break, but rather a break from high PO2 to low PO2. Those divers will switch from, say 1.6 ATA or higher to backgas resulting in say .16 ATA. Irvine attributes various beneficial physiological effects including amelioration of vasoconstriction inherent in prolonged high PO2 breathing, reduction in capillary bed swelling and other tertiary high PO2 effects to this toggling. Preventing these negative reactions allows maximal deco efficiency. This advantage is so profound that Irvine stipulates that the low ox break be counted toward total deco time 1:1. Obviously, the WKPP profiles include sat exposures where both CNS and pulmonary toxicity are factors-not the case for most "tech" exposures.
In the context of the 100 v. 80/20 discussion, the toggling effect is not accounted for in any model of which I'm aware, which, if valid, makes the model indicated deco time comparison less meaningful. Seems to me the only way to really test this is with a Doppler. Naturally, that concedes the significant limitations of the Doppler in predicting a hit, but it would provide some basis for comparative deco stress assessment.
Has any controlled work been done on this?
In the context of the 100 v. 80/20 discussion, the toggling effect is not accounted for in any model of which I'm aware, which, if valid, makes the model indicated deco time comparison less meaningful. Seems to me the only way to really test this is with a Doppler. Naturally, that concedes the significant limitations of the Doppler in predicting a hit, but it would provide some basis for comparative deco stress assessment.
Has any controlled work been done on this?