SunkenHead
Registered
I recently came upon an article (Cialoni et al, "White Blood Cells, Platelets, Red Blood Cells and Gas Bubbles in SCUBA Diving: Is there a Relationship?"), actually a new article, as it came out this year, which studies, as the name indicates, the possible relationship between blood cells and bubble formation in the blood. The results were interesting. Broadly put, the subjects with high white blood cell count also had a small bubble formation count.
This test was not statistically relevant, as they put it themselves, but nevertheless it opens a door of new studies.
Now, if the relation was found and cuantified, how in your opinion could this benefit the recreational scuba world? I want to think personalized dive tables could be made, allowing for high WBCC (white blood cell count) some extra time without the excessive conservationism of the current ones, and for the not high WBCC a safer table, proper to their physical limits.
I can also imagine the scenario where this could lead to eugenics and more elitism in diving, so we have many possibilities, if this study turns out to be correct.
Cheers!
Sebastian.
This test was not statistically relevant, as they put it themselves, but nevertheless it opens a door of new studies.
Now, if the relation was found and cuantified, how in your opinion could this benefit the recreational scuba world? I want to think personalized dive tables could be made, allowing for high WBCC (white blood cell count) some extra time without the excessive conservationism of the current ones, and for the not high WBCC a safer table, proper to their physical limits.
I can also imagine the scenario where this could lead to eugenics and more elitism in diving, so we have many possibilities, if this study turns out to be correct.
Cheers!
Sebastian.