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| Dive Medicine & Fitness: Discuss Dangers of 100% O2? in the General Diving Forums forums: So, I'm back from my hols, and am gradually working through the various RSS feeds to which I'm ... |
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| Dangers of 100% O2? So, I'm back from my hols, and am gradually working through the various RSS feeds to which I'm subscribed, and I've just come across this. Damn Interesting » Beware the Dangers of Oxygen and there is a reference to this link which may be considered a bit more authoritative Oxygen Meant to Resuscitate May Damage Brain: Scientific American To summarise the bits relevant to we divers: - Oxygen can be toxic at high partial pressures (natch). - Conventional wisdom says that if a tissues would die for lack of O2 then obviously it makes sense to introduce (forcibly if necessary) the highest concentration of O2 possible. - However, pure O2 can have negative effects that can cause: a) the circulatory system to work less effectively, thereby reducing the amount of O2 taken up, and b) the brain to have a negative reaction, further reducing effectiveness. The article goes on to talk about the "brain dies after six minutes without O2" theory, and about how that may only be the case in the first place because of the practice of forcing O2 into (recently) clinically dead patients. Apparently, if they just waited (and tried different techniques), it might be possible to revive more patients. Anyway, so what do you medical types think? Should we be thinking about stopping using 100% O2? Would, as the article implies, a DAN O2 kit with bottles containing 5% CO2 be much better for us? Was KnitwearMan right after all (perish the thought
__________________ Ian |
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| Interesting, I'll wait for few more peer-reviewed studies and new advice form the 1st aid organisations though :-) But no way would you want ot mix up a bottle of 95%O2/5%CO2 with anything you might take diving! Iain. |
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| I did a dry dive in the Wirral last November and the guy that gave the talk before we dived was talking about how 100% O2 was a thing of the past and soon we'll all be using heliox (at 50% O2).
__________________ Alistair |
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__________________ There is life outside the loft? http://www.windguru.cz/int/index.php...sc=47904:rain: |
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Possably due to the cost of Helium ATB Mark Chase
__________________ Mark, dispite the fact your a Heron shagging tosser I agree with you , Steve S 10/04/08 ATB as most people will tell you, means Always Talking Boll@cks. My responses to threads should be treated accordingly All The Best Mark Chase Screw the force Luke, use the VR3 |
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| I definitely agree with Iain's comment - I don't think that people will change their practice on the basis of one study. without seeing the original it's difficult to comment, but my first thoughts were 1. What tissues do in a dish is not necessarily what they do in a person 2. tests on healthy child volunteers to not necessarily translate to the same results on sick adults (Obviously both the above methods are used in testing new treatments anyway and so i am not dismissing them - merely saying that one should be cautious with interpretation of the results) 3. unless you have intubated the patient you will not be giving them 100% oxygen. Even a tight fitting face mask with high flow O2 is likely to be giving around 85-90% so you will be getting some CO2 in there. 4. Would you be happy to be a guinea pig for the "wait and see" approach? the only way to tell if this is better is to randomise your resus patients into high/ low FiO2 and I know which arm I'd want to be in! Will be sticking with as much O2 as i can stuff in my patients for now! |
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| there is no doubt about it oxygen is highly adictive and everyone who has ever used it will die regardless of the concentration or partial pressure.
__________________ Sliding down the razor blade of life. |
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__________________ Ian |
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| Methinks I won't be getting rid of my resus o2 bottle for self and family any time soon!
__________________ Phil DiFF With all the misery in the world, the misunderstanding, intollerance, fanaticism, greed and abuse, it is wonderful to appreciate that this is not the way of the universe, and not the way God, your God, meant it to be. The smile of a child tells us that. Peter Stone, author, diver. |
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