Scuba diving emergencies: Difference between revisions

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{{Scuba diving DDX}}
{{Scuba diving DDX}}
==Barotrauma of Descent==
===[[Otic barotrauma]] ("ear squeeze")===
===[[Sinus barotrauma]] ("sinus squeeze")===
===[[Face squeeze]]===
*Occurs when air is not added to facemask during descent resulting in:
**Facial bruising
**Conjunctival Injection/hemorrhage
**Retrobulbar hemorrhage if severe


==Barotrauma of Ascent==
==Barotrauma of Ascent==

Revision as of 23:19, 10 February 2015

Diving Emergencies

Barotrauma of Ascent

Pulmonary barotrauma

  • Occurs when diver breathing compressed air ascends too rapidly
  • Symptoms occur minutes to hours after surfacing
    • Can occur without rapid ascent in pts w/ obstructive lung disease
  • Lung rupture can lead to pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, or air embolism
    • Pneumomediastinum and pneumothorax do not require recompression

Decompression sickness (DCS)

  • Dissolved inert gases come out of solution and form bubbles in blood and tissue

Types

Type I (Pain only DCS)
  • Involves the joints, extremities, and skin ("cutis marmorata")
  • Usually only single joint is involved
Type II (Serious DCS)
  • Spinal cord involvement
    • Ascending paralysis
    • Signs often cannot be traced to single location in the cord (may have skip lesions)
  • Vestibular ("staggers") involvment
    • Vertigo, hearing loss, tinnitus
      • Differentiated from inner ear barotrauma which usually occurs on descent
  • Pulmonary "chokes"
    • Cough, hemoptysis, dyspnea, substernal chest pain
Type III (Type II + gas embolism)
  • Variety of stroke symptoms/signs
    • May spontaneously resolve

[[Arterial gas embolism

  • Results from pulmonary barotrauma (most common) and decompression sickness
  • Symptoms develop during ascent or immediately upon surfacing
  • Causes variety of stroke syndromes depending on part of brain affected
    • Immediate death, loss of consciousness, seizure, blindness, hemiplegia
Treatment
  1. Place in supine position
  2. 100% O2
  3. IVF (increases tissue perfusion)
  4. Rapid recompression

At Depth injuries

Source

Tintinalli