That is what is interesting about this study Ken. (At least to me!) I think there has always been some level of discussion going on about exactly how the bubbles were destructive and incredulous as it may sound, there seems to be some people who still feel that there is no direct correlation between bubbles and DCS. For me, the big question that remains is whether the damage caused by bubbles at a cellular level is permanent in anyway.
Hi Randy.
Sorry to interrupt this thread with VGE talk, but you keep baiting me to join with stuff like....
"....some people who still feel that there is no direct correlation between bubbles and DCS."
Randy, That statement is correct. Here is some expert opinions on this:
From the latest Consensus development conference on the subject of VGE: Recommendation 11: Fair interpretation: Interpretation of bubble data should be appropriately constrained, for a number of reasons: • bubbles do not equal DCS; .....
Neal Pollock says similar things in his DCS stress presentations: warns against the direct correlation remarks - slide.
Under those same consensus guidelines above, David Doolette tried to bring the nedu 192 dive, shallow stop test, to a positive conclusion on VGE - it failed to achieve this; Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine 46 (1) VGE detected by two dimensional echocardiography are an imperfect endpoint for DCS. From the conclusion... VGE cannot be used to diagnose DCS, but it can be used for comparisons of procedures....
I have another paper from the Bruback group (2012?), in which they put the VGE to DCS direct correlation at just 4%.
Randy, this "direct correlation" notion, is simply not true. VGE can be used as a general average of stress, but it cannot be used as an absolute measure. i.e compare within a single profile for a general level of stress, but is still a weak measure.
You might like to know, one can reduce their VGE by as much as 84%, through pre-dive vibration. Pre-dive Whole-Body Vibration Better Reduces Decompression-Induced Vascular Gas Emboli ...
Imagine; I have lower VGE than you, because I drive a bumpy pick up truck to the dive site, and you drive a Mercedes? So if individuals can influence at will their VGE score by a 5:1 factor, then what does it say about the worth of VGE?
The biomarker rat test discussed here, suffers from the same vagueness issues of DCS It says: "The total bubble count for each rat varied widely between the animals at each time point (Figure 1B)", and "However, bubble formation showed significant variability even among rats with low weight variation and with decompression at the same rate, with coefficient of variation ranging from 34% to 79% between the three subgroups. This finding coincides with observations that individual variation in DCS susceptibility exists in divers 19,30. "
We know VGE and deco stress occur concurrently, but not in any predictable ratio. We also know a lot of combined stresses will cause a DCS, but we also know that VGE is not the cause of DCS in most people.
Still today, no one really knows why, or where, or how VGE grow. Until these important questions are answered, please do not be tempted to over-hype the value of VGE. The underlying message of the consensus paper above, was to avoid doing this.
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Back to the thread topic:
There are two decompression rates used in the test - one is almost a direct ascent - it shows significant deviations in biomarkers (RD group). The other deco rate, was a bit slower, and has almost no change in biomarkers (SD).. It's a fine line between the groups.
Ascent rates: (44ft to 66ft/min for RD group, 16ft/min for SD group).
The paper says; "Linear regression revealed a significant positive relationship between decompression rate and bubble formation (Fig. 2B)."
Are the bubbles and damage because of animal studies have driven decompression beyond the failure point, to something that is guaranteed to create a DCS? A direct ascent and skipped deco is already known to be bad every time.
A rat has 0.4% the body mass of a human, and I think its unlikely to be able to make rats decompress with the same onset of VGE, as we see in humans. I imagine its difficult to animal test the human condition - Normal VGE that are present in all of us, but are not causing us a DCS incident.
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I think some readers have been missing some important benefits of these tests. In part, it is providing bio-markers to show that a DCS has occurred. This may well lead to something that the the hyperbaric doctor can test for, before deciding how much treatment to provide. Currently the diagnosis for DCS is very limited. How often does the emergency room leave DCS patients waiting and untreated, because they don't believe the patient story for urgency? A positive blood test would give confidence towards a speedy treatment.
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