Simon Mitchell
Well-Known Member
Could you refer me to the page where theres something that suports your argument
Mark
Good luck with that Mark.
Simon
Could you refer me to the page where theres something that suports your argument
Mark
Your story is a good cautionary one though- the recovery should stand as an example of what can happen with ease and we all need to be mindful of that.
So you failed to answer the pertinent question - where did this "massive VGE" come from?
The man did not have the total gas load to produce this.
Of course, I am asking for the impossible a doctor to correct his mistaken opinion.
Well I thought about your earlier question: "why DCIEM rejected profiles producing VGE greater than grade 2 on more than 50% of occasions"
The answer is they wanted everyone to enjoy the pleasures of VGE. By using a level 2, and with the 50% variance between individuals, it means that over 90% of all divers can benefit from VGE coursing through their system, accumulating in their lungs, and making little blips on doppler screens everywhere. Almost no one is left out. Wasn't that thoughtful of them.
So you failed to answer the pertinent question - where did this "massive VGE" come from? The man did not have the total gas load to produce this. He did a normal ascent. The dive profile and repeat pattern is common in diving. But this man experienced a deviation - orders of magnitude greater than normal - that you say killed him shortly surfacing. It seems your VGE explanation does not stand up to analysis.
Dissolved gas accumulated in the tissues during the dive, and bubbles formed in the tissue microcirculation when the tissues became supersaturated on ascent.
Simon M
According to what Ross? Your "model math"? So when something actually happens we should say it didn't happen because it is not predicted by the "model math"? It happens Ross, and although you can't predict it sitting in front of your computer, I, my colleagues, and the diving medicine literature can assure you that we see it sitting in front of our patients. Thankfully rarely. Sorry.
No, what you are asking is for me to reject decades of received wisdom, enshrined in the clinical diving medicine literature, .
Simon M
So if they didn't come from him and his own gas load, what killed him? Are you saying the apparent froth in his lungs was AGE paradoxical to his actual gas load? I need an alternative explanation, with some data not just that the model says he's fine so its impossible to die from VGE...
I looked back and perhaps I missed it, but I am pretty sure I'm not the only person in the world who has felt they were bent, descended and done additional deco with resolution of symptoms. Are you still saying in water hits are not possibly due to VGE?
..
But, minutes after surfacing clutching his chest, he collapses and dies shortly afterwards.
Does that sound like normal? I hope not, because millions of divers every year do exactly the deco profiles and weekend diving, that this man did.
rossh said:The physics of dive medicine, do not support your diagnosis.
Hi,
The diving physics and math do not support a "Massive VGE" as reported by Simon. The only validation he has for that, so far is his opinion.
"The pathologist who did not have training in diving medicine and did the autopsy (and found gas everywhere as you do following a fatality early after a dive) initially said arterial gas embolism, but immediately changed his opinion when he heard evidence from the diving medicine experts."You really do have problems with short term memory. Don't forget the Queensland Coroner, whose opinion was derived from those of Drs Gorman, Edmonds, Mitchell, Fock and Acott (forgot to add his name to my previous list). None of these experts disagreed with the diagnosis of cardiopulmonary DCS. Andrew (Fock) also raised the possibility of a cardiac cause (as a less likely option) in his report, but the autopsy largely ruled that out.
Simon M
So the only one who saw the body changed his opinion. Hmm. Maybe he was right and changed his opinion under the pressure of several experts...
"The pathologist who did not have training in diving medicine and did the autopsy (and found gas everywhere as you do following a fatality early after a dive) initially said arterial gas embolism, but immediately changed his opinion when he heard evidence from the diving medicine experts."
So the only one who saw the body changed his opinion. Hmm. Maybe he was right and changed his opinion under the pressure of several experts...
Millions? Hmmm, but in any event no, it obviously doesn't sound "like normal", but it sure sounds like what Dr Carl Edmonds writes about pulmonary DCS in his on line diving medicine text (see bottom of page 15-4)....
http://www.divingmedicine.info/Ch 15 SM10c.pdf
.....
Listen to yourself! If the physics were always right and all that mattered, no one who follows a dive table algorithm properly would get sick.... but it happens all the time (Michael on this thread).
Simon M
Under the pressure of several experts (scientists)... experts that think they never make mistakes, experts that lot of times are blind for simple answers because their knowledge limits their vision and understanding....experts that are normal humans with their limitations and mistakes.
I have seen kids solving problems that experts in the field couldn't (because their knowledge limited them to see solution).
Couldn't they be wrong...?!?
Sent from my PAP4500DUO using Tapatalk 2
You have made good reference to supporting information - thank you. However, the references and the experts opinions are all from the same source.
rossh said:Here is the problem: etc.
rossh said:Nothing of his dive procedure was capable of making an extra large dose of VGE.
As they say "you cannot make strawberry jam from dog pooh". The ingredients of "massive VGE" were not there.
rossh said:The second implies that normal levels of gas and VGE are in motion, but the individual is suffering from a weak or failing respiratory system, that eventually cause his death under the added stress of normal decompression.
Anything below 6m is deep, he said
I rememberd that when the coment of "deep dive" was asociated with max 30m
Thinking about it I have probably witness more suspected bends and proper full on bends on 30m dives than I have on tec dives.
must be something to do with being in the pacific rather than the Atlantic.
I seem to recall spending a lot of years doing a lot of 60m plus dives on air (a lot with single tanks) and I'm neither dead, permanently disabled or blind. nor are any of my mates that I regularly did those dives with.
these days I'd rather do those dives on a rebreather with trimix because it's about a hundred times easier for old blokes like me, but deep air dives do not equal instant death.
must be something to do with being in the pacific rather than the Atlantic.
I seem to recall spending a lot of years doing a lot of 60m plus dives on air (a lot with single tanks) and I'm neither dead, permanently disabled or blind. nor are any of my mates that I regularly did those dives with.
these days I'd rather do those dives on a rebreather with trimix because it's about a hundred times easier for old blokes like me, but deep air dives do not equal instant death.
I just moved something on my desk and found an old BSAC '88 Tables Dive Conduct Slate, for non-UK divers its a plastic square with the bare minimum amount of Decompression tables on the back for just-in-case scenario, you are supposed to write your dive plan on the front and 3 alternates- Longer, Deeper and Worse case, its actually a brilliant little thing.
What piqued my interest was a couple of weeks ago we dived a 45mtr wreck and despite the majority of the boat being on CCR or Nitrox no-one did much more than 25min BT and all did considerable, multiple stops... These old tables only give 1@9 and 6@6 for such a dive- on AIR!
Has made me wonder if the modern cautious, deep stop filled, mixed gas capable all-singing computers have made the current divers a bit nervous/careful. I see people using heavy GF's on bailout slates for pity's sake- not to mention doing many minutes of deco on dives well above 40mtrs.
I'm certainly not calling for a return to bend and fix ascents and sub-clinical aches and pains on the drive home and day after... but a certain amount of common sense, especially as a backup/bailout is surely in order?
If you need to bailout and have a broken unit on a recreational dive you don't need to creep up doing 10:80 GF ascent over half an hour- just get-off, get up, get out and sort it on the boat.
Sometimes you can be so-far inside the curve it becomes tedious
Thoughts?