Diving and Hyperbaric Physiology - what have we learned?

Ғылым және технология

Extreme Environmental Physiology Conference 2019
James Clark (King’s College London, UK)
The underwater environment poses a number of physical and physiological stresses on the body, not least of these is the effect of elevated ambient pressure which increases with depth. Hyperbaria is the underlying cause of a number of diving disorders mediated by gas saturation in the tissues including inert gas narcosis, oxygen toxicity and high-pressure neurological syndrome. In addition, inert (usually nitrogen) gas saturation has to be managed to avoid the clinical signs of decompression sickness. Traditionally, gas saturation during descent and desaturation on ascent has been the focus of considerable research and has undoubtedly led to many advances in our understanding of gases under pressure in the body, the development of safer decompression algorithms for divers, and a better understanding of bubble formation upon decompression including the use of technology to ameliorate decompression illness. Accordingly, this is the primary physiological challenge considered in recreational diving training manuals, text books. However. the recognition of other pathologies and physiological challenges through better understanding of immersion physiology and dysbaria has taught us valuable lessons in understanding, diagnosing and ultimately, assessing the risks associated with diving. This presentation will reflect on the history of diving research and take a look at current state and future perceptiveness in our understanding of the physiology of diving.

Пікірлер: 6

  • @lm58142
    @lm581423 жыл бұрын

    5:00 "...and for every ten meters under that, it then goes up exponentially." Not really. The pressure is a linear function of depth, not an exponential one.

  • @lm58142

    @lm58142

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Hans_Magnusson Pressure ratios are important, but they are not the same thing as pressure in absolute terms. The dimension of pressure is [M L^-1 T^-2]. Once we divide pressure by pressure, those dimensions cancel out and we are left with a dimensionless entity. From 10 msw to the surface the pressure change is exactly the same as from 20 msw to 10 msw. In fact, msw is not even a unit of length but a pressure unit, so the change in pressure is -10 msw or -1 bar in both cases.

  • @DilupthaPerera
    @DilupthaPerera3 жыл бұрын

    This talk is fantastic! Thank you so much.

  • @cumbriahyperbaric2888
    @cumbriahyperbaric28884 жыл бұрын

    Great lecture thanks. Is there a link to the global warming lecture mentioned early on?

  • @miraclemiracle9289
    @miraclemiracle92893 жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @TanTan-ch3vq
    @TanTan-ch3vq3 ай бұрын

    Bad lecturer

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