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Treatment of Decompression Illness

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Title: Treatment of Decompression Illness


1
Treatment of Decompression Illness
2
Evidence for Efficacy of Recompression
  • considerable collective experience
  • repeated personal observations consistent with
    beneficial effect
  • case reports / series etc
  • consensus opinion of experts
  • no double blind RCTs
  • acceptance as the definitive treatment of DCI is
    such that patients would be reluctant to be
    controls and doctors would be reluctant to omit
    recompression in the majority of cases

3
Initial Objectives of treatment
  • pressure
  • reduces volume of gas bubbles
  • bubble crushing relieves mechanical effects
  • enhances gas diffusion out
  • increase in bubble surface area to volume ratio
  • increased pressure in bubble

4
Use of Oxygen
  • With changes in diving practice failure rates for
    serious case with USN tables 1-4 reached 46
  • 1937 Behnke Shaw experimented with oxygen at
    2.8 ATA after a brief period at 6 ATA on air
  • excellent results
  • take advantage of wide open oxygen window
  • reduces white cell adhesion
  • USN unhappy to use oxygen
  • However beware the box!

5
USN 6A

6
Use of Oxygen
  • 1964 Goodman Workman used oxygen once in a
    pressure range 2-2.8 ATA
  • Identified a Minimally Adequate Recompression
    Table
  • 30 mins at 2.8 ATA, ascent over 90 mins, all on
    oxygen
  • failure rate 3.6 despite cases of similar
    severity

7
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8
Use of Mixtures Including Oxy-Helium
  • still doctors liked to use 50 msw
  • 1970s Comex introduced a 30 msw table with 50
    nitrox to minimise gas load but allow 4 ATA
  • 50 nitrox also used by some at 50 msw
  • 1958 20 heliox allowed by USN as an alternative
    to air
  • 6ATA without increasing nitrogen load
  • nitrogen elimination gradient maximised
  • narcosis not a problem
  • heliox mixtures used for a variety of tables
  • 50 for RNTT67, RNs version of Comex 30

9
The Comex 30 table
10
Hawaiian Tables
11
Objectives of treatment
  • high partial pressure of oxygen
  • aids elimination of inert gas
  • gradient
  • oxygen window
  • reverses tissue hypoxia
  • reduces white cell adhesion to endothelium
  • allows re-establishment of circulation

12
RECOMPRESSION
  • Therapeutic tables utilised vary depending upon
    requirements
  • But do we really understand what we are doing?

13
Denial
  • real problem
  • adhered to table
  • never had a problem on same profile before
  • cant happen to me
  • attributed to other things
  • motion sickness
  • hangover
  • bad prawn curry
  • fear of consequences on diving / job etc
  • particular problem with Technical divers
  • self treatment

14
Recovery Procedures
  • if incapacitated diver should be recovered from
    the water
  • protect airway
  • do not delay moving diver to a place of safety
    unless it is a long way
  • standby diver
  • with or without breathing apparatus

15
First Aid
  • ABC
  • Oxygen
  • Improves cerebral functioning
  • Decreases severity of bends
  • Can mask DCI
  • ? cure DCI
  • Fluids

16
Communications
  • notify personnel in charge of diving operation
  • activities / machinery might need to be stopped
    for safety of casualty / other personnel
  • notify emergency services / on site medical team
    if appropriate
  • contact hyperbaric facility for advice and to
    ensure ready to receive casualty
  • establish how casualty will be transported
  • and who is to arrange this

17
Transporting the Patient with DCI
  • ideally the patient should be transported at no
    less than 1 ATA
  • choose fastest and most appropriate transport
  • if flown then keep altitude below 300m and
    patient should breathe 100 O2
  • helicopter fast in flight but has limitations
  • refuel points
  • landing points
  • prep time
  • night flying
  • weather / wind
  • winching time

18
Diagnosis of DCI
  • HISTORY
  • gas load / reduction in ambient pressure
  • Include
  • dive profile
  • rate of ascent
  • symptom onset time
  • changes in symptom type or intensity
  • More Likely
  • missed deco stops
  • heavy exertion during dive
  • rapid ascent
  • previous Hx of DCI

19
Role and Timing of the Clinical Examination
  • clinical examination guides treatment decisions
  • should not delay treatment unnecessarily
  • discontinue assessment as soon as established
    that patient requires urgent recompression and is
    safe for compression
  • thorough examination pre-treatment
  • sometimes required in subtle cases
  • appropriate in static, mild cases with long delay
    between onset and presentation
  • will give best baseline assessment on which to
    gauge effectiveness of treatment

20
Role and Timing of the Clinical Examination
  • completion of examination on compression or at
    treatment depth
  • ongoing assessment required by attendant or
    doctor inside chamber
  • detailed post-treatment examination

21
Delay to Recompression
  • intuitively earlier -gt better outcome
  • naval experience with on-site chambers is
    supportive
  • best evidence to date is that severity at time of
    recompression is best indicator of outcome
  • very few cases seen early enough to make a
    difference?
  • skew in presentation
  • serious early
  • mild delayed
  • clearly this makes a progressive case most urgent

22
IV Fluids and Drugs
  • Fluids
  • crystalloid for rehydration
  • colloid for intravascular volume
  • no glucose if neurological insult
  • Steroids
  • ECHM consensus should not be used
  • Lidocaine
  • some evidence of usefulness in AGE
  • ECHM consensus optional for other neuro DCI
  • Antiplatelet Drugs
  • ECHM consensus aspirin NSAIDs optional
  • ECHM strongly recommends anticoagulants for DVT
    prophylaxis

23
  • Undersea Hyperb Med. 2003 Fall30(3)195-205.
  • Adjunctive treatment of decompression illness
    with a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
    (tenoxicam) reduces compression
    requirement.Bennett M, Mitchell S, Dominguez
    A.Department of Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine,
    Prince of Wales Hospital, and University of NSW,
    Sydney, Australia.180 subjects were graded for
    severity on admission and randomized according to
    a stratified random number schedule. Subjects
    were recompressed and treatment continued daily
    until symptom stabilization or complete
    resolution. Tenoxicam 20 mg or a placebo
    preparation was administered at the first air
    break during the initial recompression and
    continued daily for seven days. The subjects were
    assessed using a recovery status score at the
    completion of treatment and at 4-6 weeks. The
    proportion of patients with mild residual
    symptoms at discharge and final follow-up was not
    significantly different (discharge placebo 30
    versus tenoxicam 37, P0.41 six weeks placebo
    20 versus tenoxicam 17, P0.58). There was a
    significant reduction in the number of treatments
    required to achieve discharge (median treatments
    placebo 3, tenoxicam 2, P0.01). 61 of patients
    in the tenoxicam group required less than 3
    compressions, versus 40 in the placebo group
    (P0.01, RRR 33 95CI 9-56, NNT5 95CI
    3-18). There was no evidence of increased
    complications of treatment in the tenoxicam
    group. When given this NSAID, patients with DCI
    require fewer hyperbaric oxygen (HBO2) sessions
    to achieve a standard clinical end-point and
    there is likely to be an associated cost saving.

24
Monoplace
UK Category 4
25
Duoplace Chamber
26
Multiplace
27
Gas Supplies and Gas Storage
28
Use of Algorithms
  • standardises approach
  • ensures correct gases and capabilities available
  • facilitates collection of statistics of success
  • allows expert opinion to guide less experienced

29
Treatments for Residua
  • residua are treated with repeat hyperbaric
    treatments
  • typically 12-14 msw for 90 minutes
  • reduced pO2 to reduce side-effects
  • seems to be as effective
  • bubble crushing not required at this stage

30
General Advice
  • treat promptly, do not delay
  • follow treatment table accurately
  • do not ignore minor symptoms, they can quickly
    become serious
  • after treatment, keep in the vicinity for 24
    hours re-assess

31
Some complex issues
32
Amazon Abyss
33
Amazon Abyss
34
The Hyperlite
35
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36
The new Bonner Lab
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