Gas Laws & Bubble Formation - Pressure's Pesky Puffs
- Boyle's Law: $P_1V_1 = P_2V_2$. Gas volume expands on ascent (↓pressure); risk of barotrauma (lungs, ears, sinuses).
- Dalton's Law: $P_{total} = \sum P_{partial}$. Governs partial pressures of inspired gases (O2, N2); relevant for gas toxicities.
- Henry's Law: Gas dissolved in liquid $\propto$ its partial pressure ($C = kP_{gas}$). N2 dissolves in tissues at depth.
- Bubble Formation:
- Ascent (↓pressure) → N2 supersaturation → N2 gas bubbles form from dissolved state.
- Bubbles in tissues/blood cause Decompression Sickness (DCS).
- Critical for staged decompression.

⭐ Nitrogen narcosis ("Martini's Law"): Euphoric/impaired effects similar to alcohol, typically noticeable below 30m depth (approx. 1 effect unit per 10m beyond 20m).
DCS Pathophysiology & Types - The Bends Breakdown
- Rapid ↓ ambient pressure (ascent) → dissolved inert gases ($N_2$) exceed saturation → form bubbles in tissues/bloodstream.
- Bubble Consequences:
- Mechanical: Tissue distortion; vascular obstruction (gas embolism).
- Biochemical: Endothelial damage; inflammation, platelet, coagulation activation.

| Type | Key Features & Symptoms | Names |
|---|---|---|
| Type I (Mild) | Joint pain ("bends"); Skin: Itch, rash (cutis marmorata), swelling ("skin bends"); Lymphatic: Swelling. | "Bends" |
| Type II (Serious) | Neuro: Spinal cord (common), brain (paresthesia, weakness, paralysis, vertigo - "staggers"); Cardio-Pulm: Dyspnea, chest pain ("chokes"). | "Chokes", "Staggers" |
DCS Prevention & Risk Factors - Dive Smart, Surface Safe
Prevention Pathway:
- Key Risk Factors (↑ DCS):
- Dive Profile: Fast ascent, missed stops, deep/long dives, repetitive dives.
- Physiological: Dehydration, obesity, fatigue, PFO, poor fitness, older age.
- Environmental: Cold water.
- Post-dive: Flying too soon (violating no-fly times), strenuous exercise.
⭐ DAN Recommends: Wait 12 hrs after single no-stop dives; 18 hrs after multiple dives/days; 24 hrs after dives requiring decompression stops before flying to altitude.
DCS Management & Decompression Models - Taming Tiny Terrors
-
DCS Management (First Aid & Definitive)
- Immediate: 100% Oxygen, oral/IV fluids, supine position.
- Definitive: Recompression therapy (Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy - HBOT) is crucial.
- US Navy Treatment Table 6 for Type II DCS.
- Adjuncts: NSAIDs for pain.
-
Decompression Models (Predicting N₂ Load)
- Haldanian Model:
- Assumes inert gas dissolves in various body tissues ("compartments") at different rates.
- Each has a specific gas uptake/elimination half-time ($t_{1/2}$).
- Defines M-values (Maximum allowable tissue tension).
- Bühlmann Model (e.g., ZH-L16C):
- Popular algorithm in dive computers (e.g., ZH-L16), refining Haldane's concepts.
- ZH-L16 indicates 16 tissue compartments.
- Bubble Models (e.g., VPM, RGBM):
- Consider bubble mechanics (formation, growth, elimination) directly.
- Aim to limit bubble size/quantity below critical thresholds.
- Haldanian Model:
⭐ Exam Favourite: The most critical immediate step in managing suspected Decompression Sickness (DCS) is the administration of 100% normobaric oxygen.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Decompression Sickness (DCS): Results from nitrogen bubbles forming in tissues/blood due to rapid ascent.
- Henry's Law: States that ↑ambient pressure leads to ↑dissolved gas (primarily N₂) in tissues.
- DCS Types: Type I involves musculoskeletal pain ("the bends"), skin manifestations; Type II is severe, affecting neurological, cardiorespiratory, or vestibular systems.
- Prevention: Crucially involves slow ascent, adherence to decompression stops, and using dive tables/computers.
- Treatment: Immediate 100% Oxygen administration, followed by definitive hyperbaric recompression therapy.
- Arterial Gas Embolism (AGE): A critical emergency often due to pulmonary barotrauma during ascent; requires urgent recompression.
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