Diving Physiology

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Gas Laws & Pressure - Dive Deep Basics

  • Pressure Basics: 1 ATA at sea level. ↑ 1 ATA per 10m (33ft) seawater depth.

    ⭐ At sea level, atmospheric pressure is 1 ATA; this pressure doubles to 2 ATA at just 10 meters (33 feet) of seawater depth.

  • Boyle's Law: $P_1V_1 = P_2V_2$. Gas volume $\propto$ 1/Pressure (temp constant).
    • Key for barotrauma (lungs, ears, sinuses). 📌 Boyle's = Barotrauma.
  • Dalton's Law: $P_{total} = \sum P_{partial}$.
    • Basis of gas toxicities (N₂ narcosis, O₂ toxicity). 📌 Dalton's Diverse Pressures.
  • Henry's Law: Dissolved gas amount $\propto$ its partial pressure ($C = kP_{gas}$).
    • Basis of Decompression Sickness (DCS). 📌 Henry's = Helps dissolve. Boyle's Law in Diving: Gas Volume and Pressure

Dive Reflex & Responses - Aquatic Adaptations

⭐ The mammalian diving reflex, crucial for oxygen conservation, involves the triad of apnea, bradycardia, and peripheral vasoconstriction.

  • Mammalian Diving Reflex (MDR):
    • Trigger: Cold water on face/nostrils (activates trigeminal nerve receptors).
    • Purpose: Conserve $O_2$; protect vital organs (brain, heart).
    • Key Responses (The Triad):
      • Apnea: Cessation of breathing.
      • Bradycardia: Profound slowing of heart rate (↓HR).
      • Peripheral Vasoconstriction: Blood shunted from periphery to core circulation.
  • Physiological Pathway:
  • Other Adaptations:
    • Splenic contraction: Autotransfusion of RBCs, ↑ $O_2$ carrying capacity.
    • Blood shift: Central pooling of blood to protect thoracic organs from collapse at depth.

Mammalian Diving Reflex Pathway

Barotrauma & Gas Toxicity - Pressure's Perils

  • Barotrauma: Tissue injury from pressure imbalance between gas-filled body spaces & environment (Boyle's Law: $P_1V_1 = P_2V_2$).

    • Ascent (Gas Expansion):
      • Pulmonary Barotrauma (PBT): Most dangerous. Breath-holding → alveolar rupture → Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE), pneumothorax.
      • GI tract, dental.
    • Descent (Gas Compression - "Squeeze"): Middle ear (most common), sinus, mask, tooth.

    ⭐ Pulmonary barotrauma of ascent (e.g., arterial gas embolism) is the most dangerous form of barotrauma and can occur from holding breath during ascent from even shallow depths.

  • Gas Toxicity: Due to ↑ partial pressures with depth.

    • Nitrogen Narcosis ("Rapture of the deep"):
      • Impaired neuro-function (📌 Martini's Law: like 1 martini per 10m depth beyond 30m).
      • Usually significant at depths >30-40m.
    • Oxygen Toxicity:
      • CNS: Seizures, visual disturbances. Risk ↑ if $P_{O2}$ > 1.4-1.6 ATA.
      • Pulmonary (Lorrain Smith effect): Cough, dyspnea with prolonged exposure $P_{O2}$ > 0.5 ATA.
    • CO2 Toxicity (Hypercapnia):
      • Causes: Skip breathing, equipment malfunction.
      • Symptoms: Headache, dyspnea, confusion.

Pulmonary barotrauma in diving

Decompression Sickness - Bubble Trouble

  • Aka: Caisson disease, Bends.
  • Pathophysiology: Rapid ascent → ↓ ambient pressure. Dissolved N₂ (from depth, Henry's Law) forms bubbles in blood/tissues.
  • Risk factors: Deep/long dives, rapid ascent, cold, obesity, Patent Foramen Ovale (PFO).

Decompression Sickness: Causes, Symptoms, Treatment

  • Types:
    • Type I (Mild): "Bends" (joint pain), skin (mottling, itching), lymphatic obstruction.
    • Type II (Serious): Neurological (spinal cord, brain - "staggers", paralysis), cardiopulmonary ("chokes" - dyspnea, chest pain), shock.
    • Dysbaric Osteonecrosis (chronic bone necrosis).
  • Prevention: Slow ascent, adhere to dive tables/computers, safety stops.

⭐ The definitive treatment for Decompression Sickness (DCS) is recompression therapy in a hyperbaric chamber, along with 100% oxygen.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Boyle's Law: Inverse P-V relationship; causes barotrauma (ear/lung squeeze).
  • Henry's Law: ↑Pressure → ↑dissolved gas; underlies Nitrogen Narcosis & DCS.
  • Nitrogen Narcosis: Euphoria/impaired judgment at depth (>30m).
  • Decompression Sickness (DCS): N₂ bubbles from rapid ascent; treat: recompression.
  • Oxygen Toxicity: CNS (seizures)/pulmonary damage from high PO₂ (>1.4 ATA).
  • Shallow Water Blackout: Pre-dive hyperventilation → ↓PaCO₂ → hypoxic LOC.
  • Diving Reflex: Bradycardia, peripheral vasoconstriction, blood shift to conserve O₂.
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Practice Questions: Diving Physiology

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Diving Physiology | Respiratory System - OnCourse NEET-PG