While divers understand that flying
after diving may induce decompression
sickness, it's a problem more
complicated than waiting for a
computer to say "OK to fly." In fact,
cases of bends appear when flying
several days after diving or, believe it
or not, when riding an elevator.
Recent Australian research has
uncovered important information for
any traveling diver. The interesting
results were initially published in the
South Pacific Underwater
Medical Society Journal in an
article by Dr. Ian Millar. With
reprint permission from SPUMS, we
have taken the liberty to provide our
revised version of Dr. Millar's article.
In the study of 401 cases of
decompression illness treated,
44 had post-diving symptoms
after reaching altitude by air,
auto, or foot. In less than half
the 44 cases, symptoms were
prevalent before altitude exposure and, in most cases, were
mild and unrecognized. After
flying, however, symptoms
increased even when divers
waited several days to fly. In one
case symptoms increased while
flying 2 1/2 weeks after diving.
In more than half the cases,
divers were without symptoms
until they flew. Seven became
symptomatic when flying 12-24
hours after multiday, repetitive,
deep dives. One became symptomatic
after waiting two days to
fly after a single extreme dive.
While all trained divers have
learned the risks of flying after
diving, what we may not think
about is there are other ways to
gain height. Of the 44 cases
studied, 12 divers developed
initial symptoms while ascending
on terra firma. These are some
interesting elements of these 12:
Eight of these involved
altitude ascent several hours
after multiday repetitive diving.
Five involved post-dive
exercise and alcohol as risk
factors.
One diver became symptomatic
after returning to home at
2,500 feet altitude after a routine
entry-level training weekend.
The lowest altitudes associated
with initial symptoms were
1,000 feet, although these cases
involved other risk factors
including alcohol, exercise, and
prior multiday deep diving.
What's important to North
American divers is that certain
diving venues -- Saba, St. Kitts
and Nevis, and Dominica in the
Caribbean, and Maui and Kaui
in Hawaii -- are great for divers
who like to hike in the great
outdoors. Furthermore, after
diving, exercise produces a
surge of bubbles from moving
limbs. Maybe that explains why a
reader wrote to us a year ago,
wondering why his shoulder
ached like hell when he climbed
to the top of 3,000-foot Mt.
Scenery after two dives on the
Saba Pinnacles.
Even treated divers are at
risk. In one case, symptoms were
exacerbated with an altitude gain
of less than 400 feet when the
patient traveled between his home
and the hospital. In another
case, symptoms recurred when
the patient took an elevator to
the top of a 650-foot building.
Theoretical Considerations
Many flying-after-diving
tables are based upon prediction
of nitrogen washout using tissue
half-time models; they do not
consider the effect of bubbles
that remain after diving.
DCS occurring after altitude
exposure is likely to result from
tissue bubbles that were present
and from newly generated blood
bubbles that arise from the
supersaturation of nitrogen in
"slow" tissues after extensive
diving. The presence of "silent
bubbles" may help explain the
unpredictability and variable
consequences of travel to
altitude following diving.
When bubbles are present,
they will expand about nine
percent in diameter upon ascent
and may remain enlarged after
return to ground level. At lower
altitudes -- say 1,000 ft -- the
diameter increases a mere one
percent. However, it's unlikely
diameter is the critical determinant
of DCS severity. Rather,
trapped bubbles seem to trigger
inflammation and swelling in
adjacent tissues. Furthermore,
decreased oxygen -- commercial
aircraft may involve a decrease
in oxygen partial pressure in the
order of 30 percent -- may be
critical for tissues that have marginal
blood supply because of
bubbles and inflammation.
Persistent bubbles, tissue inflammation
and sensitivity to reactivation
of inflammation and edema
may remain for days or weeks.
What this means to the
traveling diver is that after
treatment on foreign soil one is
again at risk when flying home.
Most Australian hyperbaric units
use one month as the interval
recommended before flying,
with longer intervals appropriate
for some patients. These "at
risk" patients should experience
altitude by diving or short haul
domestic flight before embarking
on an international flight.
Recommendations
Surely, there is need for
guidelines to cover land travel
after diving. In fact, one can
apply the flight table to divers
who, right after diving, decide to
go hiking. Table Pioneer Dr. A.
Buhlmann, seeing a need for
guidelines for road travel in his
home country of Switzerland,
said that for dives involving less
than 60 minutes in the previous
12 hours, a diver should wait 4
hours before traveling to altitudes
up to [00,000] feet.
Divers with DCS prodromal
symptoms -- lethargy, malaise,
and transient "pins and needles"
or "niggles" -- or who have
exceeded dive limits or experienced
undue exertion need to
be extremely cautious about
flying. If bent on a plane, the
usual treatment of 100 percent
oxygen will not be available --
only the low-concentration
therapy oxygen. Therefore,
multiday, deep repetitive dives
should be followed by 36 hours
or more before flying (two
night's rest).
Furthermore, abnormal
symptoms, injuries, or intercurrent
illnesses following travel to
hilly locations should be an
indication to cancel or at least
severely restrict remaining
diving or delay flying.
DCS isn't fun. It can injure you
and curtail your diving forever. Just
because you keep your feet firmly
planted on Mother Earth after a
week of diving doesn't mean you
can't become a victim.
In fact, one of our wise readers,
Nancy Bitner of Orlando, Florida,
knows that. She went diving on the
Big Island of Hawaii last year and
wrote,"Wish we had known to go to
the active volcano before beginning
our dives. The 7,000-foot altitude
prevented us from going the last day."
Conservative diver? Yes. And
one smart lady.
Ben Davison