For all the fear factors associated with the bends,
it doesn’t kill divers. In DAN’s (Divers Alert Network)
recently released 2006 report of U.S. and Canadian dive
injuries and fatalities in 2004, DAN reported no fatalities
due to DCS. Arterial gas embolisms (AGE) are the killer,
occurring in 20 of the 88 fatalities studied.
As divers know, an AGE is caused when air pressure
builds up excessively in the lungs, resulting in gas bubbles
being carried to major organs, including the brain. With
full lungs, a rise of just a few feet can cause an embolism.
For example, 20 years ago, filmmaker Ron Church was
filming in bluewater, holding his breath to steady his camera. He rose only a few feet, embolized and died.
You don’t have to dive deep to suffer an embolism. A
56-year-old who attempted to retrieve an anchor 17 feet
deep surfaced in distress, called out for help, and quickly
passed out (a classic sign of an embolism). Resuscitation
efforts were unsuccessful. The diver was certified but
had made only two dives in twelve months. The autopsy
revealed a pulmonary barotrauma (gas forced through
lung tissues, a prime cause of AGE).
One open-water student was practicing rescue procedures
in a lake and ascended from 15 feet. While towing
a fellow diver, the 50-year-old male began to struggle
and then lost consciousness. Resuscitation efforts were
unsuccessful. The autopsy found changes associated with
drowning as well as intravascular gas.
Experienced Divers Can Err
Keep in mind that experienced divers can also make
the mistake of rising while holding their breath. Eric
Seibel, a popular dive instructor, was exploring the
Lowrance, a wreck near Pompano Beach, Fl. Using trimix,
the 50-year-old Seibel reached 192 fsw, then ascended
to 80 fsw before heading back down to 150 fsw. His dive
partner, an anesthesiologist, saw him “seizing . . . with
the regulator hanging out of his mouth.’’ Seibel lost consciousness
and seized the entire time he was assisted to
the surface and brought aboard the Miss Conduct. Another
diver said that he was bleeding from his ears, mouth and
throat and was “white from head to toe.” Though six paramedics
tried to revive him, he died. The autopsy, which
noted his obesity, disclosed gas in the blood vessels of
the brain, neck, and chest, indicative of an air embolism.
However, DAN says that using trimix “would have had a
low risk of causing a seizure but that is also a possibility.”
Seibel founded the website, www.e-divers.org
Drowning is always the most cited cause of death
— 64 percent of the fatalities 2004 — but DAN identified
drowning as the disabling injury in only 29 percent. Many
reported drownings were triggered by embolisms.
For example, a 48-year-old female who had received
her open-water certification a month earlier died after
making a shore-entry solo dive. She stayed in 15 fsw, but
surfaced and called for help before losing consciousness.
Her body was recovered from the bottom three hours
later. The autopsy cited drowning as the cause of death,
which DAN determined was probably triggered by an
AGE.
Rapid ascents are the primary cause of AGE, and the
primary cause of rapid ascents is running out of breathing
gas. One would presume that divers with advanced certification
would not normally run out of gas, but that’s what
happened to a 58-year-old with an advanced certification and modest diving experience. He spent 34 minutes at
70 fsw and ran low on Nitrox. During ascent he separated
from his buddy and later surfaced after dropping his
weight belt. He had removed his mask and his tank was
empty. In the boat he became unconscious and could not
be resuscitated, a victim of an air embolism.
A 47-year-old male made a boat dive with a group
of four, including a divemaster, and descended to 33
fsw. He used nearly his entire tank within 30 minutes,
but declined the divemaster’s alternate air source. The
divemaster surfaced with him and sent him back to the
boat before going back down. The morbidly obese victim
lost consciousness on the surface and died. The autopsy
showed intravascular air in the blood vessels of the brain
and heart as well as pulmonary barotrauma. His dive computer
showed several rapid ascents.
You’re Never Out of Air
The irony, of course, is that a diver is never totally
out of air at depth. One can always get a couple of extra
breaths from an “empty” tank as one ascends and the
ambient pressure decreases. Even a partially tank-inflated
BCD can provide an emergency breathe or two. Training
agencies don’t teach these techniques because they find
them too complicated to master – especially in today’s
truncated certification classes.
Yet if you must “blow and go,” the U.S. Navy recommends
an ascent rate of 30ft per minute,” about half as
fast as your bubbles rise. (Older divers were taught 60 ft.
per minute.) Of course, you should breath normally while
going up. Looking up while ascending extends your neck
to help keep your airway open (and ensures you don’t
slam into a boat hull). Some folks find that humming
helps them remember to exhale. If your ascent is uncontrolled,
spread your arms and arch your back until your
body is almost parallel to the surface to create more drag
and slow you down.
These are basic practices, which most of us have never
reviewed, and panicky divers often forget such lessons. In
their panicked state to survive, they can endanger others.
A 57-year-old woman had trouble with her mask and regulator
on a dive to 90 fsw. When she panicked, her buddy
tried to render aid and ended up sustaining decompression
sickness. The woman lost consciousness after an
uncontrolled ascent and was pronounced dead at a local
hospital, another drowning due an air embolism.
After plunging to 205 feet in a lake to examine a
wreck, an instructor and technical diver panicked during
the ascent and skipped her decompression stops. She
refused assistance and lost consciousness at 30 feet. She
was taken to the surface by her dive buddy, who omitted
some decompression and was treated in a hyperbaric
chamber. The 42-year-old woman died of an embolism
Treatment
Symptoms of AGE include blurred vision, dizziness,
sudden unconsciousness, loss of motor function, breathlessness,
coughing, and bloody froth from the mouth.
Fortunately, most cases are not fatal. Michael Strauss,
MS, and Igor Aksenov, MD, in their book Diving Science:
Essential Physiology and Medicine for Divers, write that “The
first response intervention is the immediate breathing of
100% oxygen on the surface. This is so effective that 50
percent of people with AGE have complete remission of
their symptoms. People who are unconscious should be
placed flat on their backs. This position facilitates turning
the head to the side to prevent inhalation of food or fluid
into the lungs if vomiting occurs . . .One might think that
positioning the patient in the head-down position would
reduce the bubble load to the brain, but . . .this probably
does not occur. In addition, the head-down position may
increase swelling in the brain . . .If the person is alert, oral
fluid administration is recommended to expand blood
volume and increase blood flow with concomitant oxygen
delivery. However, too much hydration can contribute to
brain swelling.”
In the next two issues, we’ll continue discussing why
divers die, hoping that presenting such cases will help us
all dive more safely.
PS: Many of these divers were overweight, if not obese.
We’ll look at how excess weight and poor conditioning
can increase divers’ chances of problems while diving.