High Altitude and Diving Injuries

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Altitude & Depths - Pressure Points

  • High Altitude (Hypobaric Hypoxia): Defined by reduced barometric pressure ($P_B$) at high elevations, causing decreased inspired partial pressure of oxygen ($P_{O_2}$), per Dalton's Law ($P_{total} = \sum P_{partial}$).
    • Key Physiological Responses: Acute hyperventilation (combats hypoxia); chronic polycythemia (↑ O2 carrying capacity).
    • Forensic Implications: Deaths from altitude sickness require BNS Section 106 analysis for negligence in occupational settings; BNSS Section 194 mandates specialized autopsy protocols.
  • Diving (Hyperbaric Environment): Defined by increased ambient pressure as water depth increases (📌 Boyle's Law: $P_1V_1 = P_2V_2$). Sea level $P_{atm}$ = 1 ATA / 760 mmHg.
    • Key Physiological Challenges: Increased gas density (↑ work of breathing), nitrogen narcosis (inert gas effect), oxygen toxicity (CNS/pulmonary).
    • Medico-Legal Considerations: Equipment failure cases fall under BNS Section 125 (causing death by negligence); BSA Section 45 governs expert testimony on diving physiology.

⭐ Nitrogen narcosis ("Martini's Law"): Impairment similar to alcohol; roughly one martini effect per 10m descent beyond 20-30m.

💡 Forensic Pearl: Gas embolism patterns on CT imaging provide crucial BSA Section 63 documentary evidence in diving fatalities.

High Altitude Sickness - Thin Air Troubles

Caused by hypobaric hypoxia, typically above >2500m.

  • Pathophysiology:

    • Hypoxia → Cerebral vasodilation (→ HACE).
    • Hypoxia → Uneven hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction → ↑ Pulmonary Artery Pressure (→ HAPE).
  • Types:

    • AMS: Lake Louise Score >3. 📌 "Can't HEAR": Headache, Eating issues (GI), Ataxia (mild), Restlessness/Dizziness, Sleep issues.
    • HACE: Severe AMS progression. Key: Ataxia, altered consciousness.
    • HAPE: Most lethal form. Key: Dyspnea at rest, cough (frothy sputum), rales.
ConditionOnset (after ascent)Key SymptomsKey Signs
AMS6-12 hrsHeadache, fatigue, nausea, dizziness, insomniaNone specific; Lake Louise Score >3
HACE1-3 daysSevere headache, ataxia, altered consciousnessAtaxia, confusion, papilledema (late)
HAPE2-4 daysDyspnea at rest, cough, chest tightnessRales, tachypnea, tachycardia, cyanosis (late)

Pathophysiology of AMS and HACE

Diving Barotrauma - Squeeze & Pop

Governed by Boyle's Law: $P_1V_1 = P_2V_2$. Pressure changes cause volume changes in gas-filled body cavities.

TypePhase (Pressure)Affected Organ(s)Key Symptom(s)
SqueezeDescent (↑P, ↓V)Middle ear (most common), sinuses, mask, dentalPain, fullness, TM rupture, epistaxis
Expansion/Reverse SqueezeAscent (↓P, ↑V)Lungs (PBT), GI tract, teethDyspnea, chest pain, crepitus, neuro deficits (AGE)

⭐ Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE), a result of pulmonary barotrauma (PBT) on ascent, is a critical emergency presenting with rapid onset neurological symptoms.

Decompression Illness - Bubble Trouble

Decompression Illness (DCI) is the overarching term encompassing both Decompression Sickness (DCS) and Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE), representing the spectrum of pressure-related injuries in diving medicine.

  • Henry's Law: $C = kP_{gas}$. ↓Pressure on ascent → dissolved N₂ (nitrogen) forms bubbles.
  • Decompression Sickness (DCS) - "The Bends": N₂ bubbles form in tissues.
    • Type I (Milder): Joint pain ("bends"), skin itch/rash ("creeps"), lymphatic swelling.
    • Type II (Serious): Neurological ("staggers" - inner ear, paralysis), Cardiorespiratory ("chokes" - dyspnea).
      • 📌 Modern classification emphasizes affected organ systems and symptom severity rather than rigid categorization.
  • Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE): Gas bubbles enter arterial circulation, often via pulmonary barotrauma.
    • Immediate onset (seconds to minutes); cerebral (stroke-like, LOC) or cardiac symptoms.

⭐ AGE is a dire emergency; symptoms often appear immediately to within minutes of surfacing. Immediate recompression is critical.

FeatureDCS Type IDCS Type IIAGE
OnsetDelayed (hrs)Delayed (mins-hrs)Immediate (seconds-minutes)
SystemsJoints, Skin, LymphNeuro, Cardiopulm, Inner EarCerebral, Cardiac
SeverityMildSeriousVery Serious

Prevention & First Aid - Safety First Strategies

ConditionPreventionFirst Aid
High Altitude Injuries
(AMS/HACE/HAPE)
* Gradual ascent: Max 300-500m/day above 3000m.
* Adequate acclimatization periods.
* Prophylactic Acetazolamide (125mg BD) if needed.
* Immediate descent is critical for severe AMS/HACE/HAPE.
* Administer Oxygen (O2).
* Use Gamow bag if descent is delayed.
Diving Injuries
(DCS/AGE)
* Strict adherence to recognized dive tables/computers.
* Slow, controlled ascent rate (<9-18m/min).
* Perform mandatory safety stops.
* Ensure medical fitness to dive.
* Administer 100% O2 immediately.
* Urgent recompression in a hyperbaric chamber (HBOT).

⭐ Descent is the definitive and most crucial first aid step for severe High Altitude Cerebral Edema (HACE) and High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • HAPE is the most lethal high-altitude illness; HACE causes ataxia and altered consciousness.
  • Gradual ascent and acetazolamide are key for acclimatization.
  • DCS Type II involves neurological (spinal), cardiopulmonary ("chokes"), or vestibular ("staggers") symptoms.
  • AGE presents with sudden neurological deficits post-ascent; requires immediate recompression.
  • Key gas laws in diving: Boyle's Law (barotrauma), Henry's Law (gas dissolution, DCS).
  • "The Bends" (joint pain) is characteristic of DCS Type I.

Practice Questions: High Altitude and Diving Injuries

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