Hyperbaric Environments

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Hyperbaric Environments - Pressure Points

  • Sea level: 1 ATA. Pressure ↑ by 1 ATA per 10m (33 ft) water descent.
    • 10m depth = 2 ATA; 30m depth = 4 ATA.
  • Boyle's Law ($P_1V_1 = P_2V_2$): Gas volume inversely proportional to pressure. Affects:
    • Middle ear (barotitis media - commonest)
    • Sinuses (barosinusitis)
    • Lungs (barotrauma on ascent if breath-held)
  • Nitrogen Narcosis: Impaired function, euphoria. Starts ~30-40m (4-5 ATA). 📌 Martini's Law.
  • Oxygen Toxicity: CNS (seizures), pulmonary. Risk ↑ with $PO_2$ & duration.

⭐ At 30 meters depth (4 ATA), inspired $PN_2$ is ~3.2 ATA, sufficient to cause nitrogen narcosis.

Hyperbaric Environments - Squeeze Play

Barotrauma from pressure differentials during descent (compression). Gas-filled cavities contract if not equalized. Governed by Boyle's Law: $P_1V_1 = P_2V_2$.

  • Affected Sites & Manifestations:
    • Middle Ear (most common): Eustachian tube dysfunction. Symptoms: pain, ↓hearing, TM rupture. Prevent: Valsalva.
    • Sinuses: Blocked ostia. Symptoms: facial pain, epistaxis.
    • Lungs (Thoracic Squeeze): Breath-holding descent/extreme depth. Risk: edema, hemorrhage.
    • Mask: Failure to exhale into mask. Result: periorbital petechiae/ecchymosis.
    • Dental (Barodontalgia): Gas in fillings/caries. Pain.
    • GI Tract: Swallowed air expands. Ear barotrauma (squeeze) diagram in middle ear, sinuses, and mask during diving descent)

⭐ Middle ear barotrauma (otic barotrauma) is the most frequent diving-related medical issue.

Hyperbaric Environments - Bends & Blows

  • High pressure (diving) alters gas behavior:

    • Boyle''s Law ($P \propto 1/V$): Barotrauma risk (squeeze/rupture).
    • Henry''s Law (dissolved gas $\propto PP$): N₂ loading at depth.
  • At Depth Issues:

    • Nitrogen Narcosis: Impaired function >30m ("Martini''s Law").
    • Oxygen Toxicity: CNS (seizures), pulmonary damage with ↑$PO_2$.
  • Ascent Issues (Gas Bubbles):

    • Decompression Sickness (DCS) "Bends": N₂ bubbles from tissues.
      • Type I: Pain (joints), skin, lymphatic.
      • Type II: Neurologic, cardiorespiratory ("chokes"), vestibular ("staggers").
    • Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE) "Blows": Lung barotrauma $\rightarrow$ arterial bubbles. Rapid, severe neuro symptoms.

      ⭐ AGE: Most critical; immediate 100% O₂, recompression. Mimics stroke.

  • Prevention/Tx:

    • Slow ascent, decompression stops.
    • 100% O₂, hyperbaric recompression for DCS/AGE.

Decompression Sickness and Arterial Gas Embolism

Hyperbaric Environments - Healing Breaths

  • Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT): Inhaling 100% O₂ at >1 Atmosphere Absolute (ATA), typically 2-3 ATA.
  • Mechanism:
    • ↑ Plasma dissolved O₂ (Henry's Law: $P = kC$).
    • Vasoconstriction (↓edema).
    • Angiogenesis, fibroblast proliferation.
    • Bactericidal/bacteriostatic.
  • Key Indications:
    • Decompression Sickness (DCS), Air/Gas Embolism.
    • CO Poisoning.
    • Clostridial Myonecrosis (Gas Gangrene).
    • Problem Wounds (diabetic ulcers).
    • Radiation Necrosis.
  • Oxygen Toxicity:
    • CNS: Seizures (Paul Bert effect); ⚠️ risk ↑ >2 ATA.
    • Pulmonary: Inflammation, fibrosis (Lorrain Smith).
    • Ocular: Myopia, cataracts.
    • Barotrauma (ears, sinuses). Hyperbaric oxygen therapy chamber diagram

⭐ HBOT significantly reduces the half-life of carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) in CO poisoning, from ~320 min on room air to ~20-30 min with 100% O₂ at 3 ATA.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Boyle's Law (gas volume inversely to pressure) explains barotrauma risk.
  • Nitrogen narcosis impairs function at depths >30m (↑dissolved N₂).
  • Oxygen toxicity causes CNS seizures or pulmonary damage.
  • Decompression Sickness (DCS) results from N₂ bubbles due to rapid ascent.
  • Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE): severe risk from pulmonary barotrauma during ascent.
  • HBOT: 100% O₂ at >1 ATA for CO poisoning, DCS, problem wounds.

Practice Questions: Hyperbaric Environments

Test your understanding with these related questions

A healthy, 37-year-old woman loses her job at the auto factory. She picks up her three young children from school and is involved in a road traffic accident. Her 5-year-old son sustains a severe head injury. The woman was not hurt in the accident but is hyperventilating as she sits in the waiting room at the hospital. She complains of feeling faint and has blurred vision. Which of the following is decreased in this woman?

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Flashcards: Hyperbaric Environments

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Exercise adaptation at high altitudes:_____ in pulmonary ventilation upon rising to a high altitude* blows off large quantities of CO2, reducing the PCO2

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Exercise adaptation at high altitudes:_____ in pulmonary ventilation upon rising to a high altitude* blows off large quantities of CO2, reducing the PCO2

Increase

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