Revision as of 12:36, 30 October 2003 editKosebamse (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers5,826 edits more - not sure about the heliox thing though - needs fact-checking← Previous edit | Revision as of 14:38, 5 February 2004 edit undoKosebamse (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers5,826 edits moved link from "see also" to textNext edit → | ||
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'''Decompression sickness''' (also known as '''the bends''') is a condition experienced by anyone going from high pressure to lower pressure, and is typically experienced by ] who ascend too quickly from depths below 10 meters. | '''Decompression sickness''' (also known as '''the bends''') is a condition experienced by anyone going from high pressure to lower pressure, and is typically experienced by ] who ascend too quickly from depths below 10 meters. | ||
When air under high pressure is breathed for any length of time, ] dissolves in the body fluids in higher than usual concentration. When moving to lower pressure, this causes the gas to come back out of solution, and form bubbles in the ]. The physiologist ] studied this problem in the early ], eventually devising the method of staged, gradual decompression, whereby the pressure on the diver is released slowly enough that the nitrogen comes gradually out of solution without forming bubbles. Repeated cases of decompression sickness can lead to brittle bones, and severe cases can lead to death. Severe cases of decompression sickness require treatment by recompression in a ''hyperbaric chamber''. | When air under high pressure is breathed for any length of time, ] dissolves in the body fluids in higher than usual concentration. When moving to lower pressure, this causes the gas to come back out of solution, and form bubbles in the ]. The physiologist ] studied this problem in the early ], eventually devising the method of staged, gradual decompression, whereby the pressure on the diver is released slowly enough that the nitrogen comes gradually out of solution without forming bubbles. Repeated cases of decompression sickness can lead to brittle bones, and severe cases can lead to death. Severe cases of decompression sickness require treatment by recompression in a '']''. | ||
An alternative name is ''caisson disease''; this name comes from the 19th century, when large engineering excavations (]s, ]s) required the work to be done in "caissons" under pressure to keep water from flooding the excavations. This was a major factor for laborers working on the ], and incapacitated the project leader ]. | An alternative name is ''caisson disease''; this name comes from the 19th century, when large engineering excavations (]s, ]s) required the work to be done in "caissons" under pressure to keep water from flooding the excavations. This was a major factor for laborers working on the ], and incapacitated the project leader ]. | ||
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Other ill effects experienced by divers are ] and ]. | Other ill effects experienced by divers are ] and ]. | ||
==See also== | |||
*] |
Revision as of 14:38, 5 February 2004
Decompression sickness (also known as the bends) is a condition experienced by anyone going from high pressure to lower pressure, and is typically experienced by divers who ascend too quickly from depths below 10 meters.
When air under high pressure is breathed for any length of time, nitrogen dissolves in the body fluids in higher than usual concentration. When moving to lower pressure, this causes the gas to come back out of solution, and form bubbles in the blood. The physiologist J.S. Haldane studied this problem in the early 20th century, eventually devising the method of staged, gradual decompression, whereby the pressure on the diver is released slowly enough that the nitrogen comes gradually out of solution without forming bubbles. Repeated cases of decompression sickness can lead to brittle bones, and severe cases can lead to death. Severe cases of decompression sickness require treatment by recompression in a hyperbaric chamber.
An alternative name is caisson disease; this name comes from the 19th century, when large engineering excavations (bridges, tunnels) required the work to be done in "caissons" under pressure to keep water from flooding the excavations. This was a major factor for laborers working on the Brooklyn Bridge, and incapacitated the project leader Washington Roebling.
Because helium has a far lower solubility in water, decompression sickness can be avoided by breathing a mixture of helium and oxygen (heliox) instead of air. This is often practised by deep-sea divers.
Other ill effects experienced by divers are nitrogen narcosis and oxygen toxicity.