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To: techdiver@aquanaut.com
Date: Thu, 02 Aug 2001 17:16:20 +0300
From: "Manos Manoli" <cytech@ma*.co*.cy*>
CC: techdiver@aquanaut.com
Subject: Re: DCS incident
Just because some guys freak out with this medical terminology...
I did anyway at the begining of the conversation ....
This is what is my search results about  PFO.

Patent Foramen Ovale

PFO (Patent foramen ovale) is a persistent opening in the wall of the heart
which did not close
completely after birth (opening required before birth for transfer of
oxygenated blood via the
umbilical cord). This opening can cause a shunt of blood from right to left ,
but more often there is
a movement of blood from the left side of the heart (high pressure) to the
right side of the heart
(low pressure).

People with shunts are less likely to develop fainting or low blood pressure
with diving than are
obstructive valve lesions (such as mitral valve stenosis or aortic stenosis),
but are more likely to
develop fluid accumulation in the lungs from heart failure and severe
shortness of breath from the
effects of combined exercise and water immersion.

Ordinarily, the left to right shunt will cause no problem; the right to left
shunt, if large enough, will
cause low arterial O2 tension (hypoxia) and severely limited exercise
capacity. In divers there is the
risk of paradoxical embolism of gas bubbles (passage of bubbles into the
arterial circulation) which
occur in just about all divers in the venous circulation during decompression.

Blood can flow in both directions with Intra-atrial shunts at various phases
of the cardiac cycle and
some experts feel that a large atrial septal defect (PFO) is a
contra-indication to diving. In addition,
a Valsalva maneuver, used by most divers to equalize their ears during
descents and ascents, can
increase venous atrial pressure to the point that it forces blood containing
bubbles across the PFO
into the arterial circulation. Thus the usual filtering process of the lungs
is by-passed.

Dr. Fred Bove, a Temple University cardiologist, did a search of the
literature for patent foramen
ovale in relation to diving and diving risks. His conclusion of a meta
analysis of 1400 injured divers
in about 2.5 million divers (DAN, 1991) in whom the risk of DCS is about 0.05%
in the diving
population, was that the risk ratio for decompression sickness is increased by
a factor of about
three for individuals with PFO, and is reduced by a factor of about 2 in
individuals who do not
have a PFO. It would appear that the risk is low and the significance of the
small differences is
questionable.

Echocardiography is the tool of choice in making the diagnosis of PFO.
However, it's probably not
a good idea to do an echocardiogram on all divers because of the cost/benefit
ratio. If you
personally are concerned or are having some of the symptoms of decompression
illness that are
undeserved,  then a bubble contrast echocardiogram should be done. Bubble
contrast
echocardiography appears to be the most sensitive method for detecting a shunt
while color flow
dopler appeared to be a poor means of detecting the shunt in a transthoracic
echo.

There have been recent reports of an association between cerebral
emboli,migraines with aura and
right to left shunts (PFO).

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