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SCUBA DIVING PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: SAFETY

Scuba diving accident off Guernsey injures UK diver

by LUTHER MONROE @ CDNN - Cyber Diver News Network

August 24, 2009

ROUSSE, Guernsey — A man was injured yesterday while scuba diving off Rousse.

Authorities have not yet identified the scuba diving accident victim, but told CDNN authorities responded to a call for help at 2:41pm.

The victim, a man in his 40s, was placed in an ambulance and rushed to a hyperbaric chamber at Ambulance and Rescue Service headquarters for treatment of potentially fatal decompression sickness.

The victim is also being treated at Princess Elizabeth Hospital.

The man's condition is not known.

Decompression sickness (the bends)

Well over half of scuba divers afflicted with decompression illness report symptoms within 1 hour of surfacing from the dive, some 95% of victims show symptoms within six hours and almost all show symptoms within 24-48 hours.

Nitrogen bubbles released while resurfacing cause damage by mechanically obstructing blood flow and can also cause a local chemical disruption of the vascular beds.

Any scuba diving accident victim with signs or symptoms of decompression illness, which can cause death or permanent paralysis, should IMMEDIATELY SEEK EMERGENCY MEDICAL TREATMENT.

Specific symptoms include:

  • Mild to severe joint pains involving the arms or legs.
  • Itching of the skin, which can progress to other symptoms of decompression illness.
  • Rashes that can be accompanied by itching.
  • Swollen and painful lymph nodes.
  • Pain in the head, neck, or torso, which is often indicative of a severe DSC hit.
  • Nervous system complaints, such as weakness on one side of the body, numbness, pains shooting down an arm or leg, inability to urinate or defecate, or other strokelike symptoms.
  • "Chokes" including burning chest pain, cough, and shortness of breath.
  • "Staggers" (indicating an inner ear problem) including a spinning sensation, deafness, ringing in the ears, or vomiting.
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    Scuba diving accident off Guernsey injures UK diver
    The injured scuba diver is placed in an ambulance, which rushed him to a hyperbaric chamber for treatment of potentially fatal decompression sickness.

     

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