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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five subjects were compressed to 1000 ft (31 ATA) for 2 h breathing 3.2 ATA nitrogen, 0.5 ATA oxygen, and the remainder helium. The compression took 33 min with a 10-s stage at 50 ft (2.5 ATA), 1 MIN AT 320 FT (10.7 ATA), and 2 min at 700 ft (22 ATA). Hypothetically, this 1:10 ratio for nitrogen-helium partial pressures should induce neither nitrogen narcosis nor the
High Pressure Nervous Syndrome
(
HPNS
). Tests, therefore, were made during the experiment of postural tremor, spontaneous electroencephalogram, psychomotor and intellectual activities, and subjective sensations. One diver worked underwater for 40 min on a simulated engineering assembly while breathing with a closed-circuit breathing apparatus and wearing a battery-heated suit in water at 56 degrees F. Decompression was in 4 d using 0.8 ATA oxygen and helium. The performance tests indicated no narcosis and little or no signs of
HPNS
. No tremor or EEG changes were seen. The "wet" diver reported sensations of mild euphoria but the other four reported no difficulties. No
nausea
or dizziness of
HPNS
was reported. It is concluded that use of a ratio of 1:10::N2:He is effective in the control of narcosis and
HPNS
during rapid compression to 1000 ft (31 ATA).
...
PMID:Optimal use of nitrogen to suppress the high pressure nervous syndrome. 111 94
Bennett (1975) reported that signs and symptoms of the
High Pressure Nervous Syndrome
(
HPNS
) appeared including
nausea
, dizziness, tremors of the hands and arms, increased slow wave activity in electroencephalogram, especially in the theta band (4-7 Hz) with depression of alpha (8-13 Hz) and beta (20 Hz and higher) on compression with oxygen-helium to depths greater than 500 ft (16 ATA). Earlier studies have indicated that the
HPNS
may be controlled by use of an increased nitrogen partial pressure, slowing compression rate or excluding subject who has higher susceptibility to
HPNS
. For determining the effect of slowing compression rate, it was changed to new compression profile of linear compression to 31 ATA with intermediate stops in SEADRAGON-VI carried out at JAMSTEC in 1983. All divers to compressed to 31 ATA using the new rate complained few and slight signs and symptoms involved
HPNS
than ever experienced.
...
PMID:[On the compression rate for inhibiting high pressure nervous syndrome under high pressure helium atmosphere]. 372
A group of 23 professional divers was investigated before and after dives to 300 and 350 metres of sea water. 12 divers were also studied during the actual dive. All divers presented neurological symptoms and signs during compression. Intention tremor, ataxia, motor weakness, sensory symptoms, vertigo,
nausea
and reduced memory were the most prominent features of the
High Pressure Nervous Syndrome
(
HPNS
). There were considerable individual differences. Neuropsychological and neurophysiological investigations performed after one dive showed no significant changes in any of the divers, while there was a clear-cut impairment in a group of 6 divers who had performed 2 dives 3 months apart. These changes indicate that there may be pressure-induced brain dysfunction which persists for a transient post-dive period. Loss of short-term memory is a prominent part of this dysfunction. Transitory neurological signs indicating focal cerebral dysfunction were found immediately post-dive in 4 divers, presumably reflecting the unmasking of pre-existing subclinical minimal CNS lesions.
...
PMID:Central nervous dysfunction associated with deep-sea diving. 397 49