[深潜者减压]。

B Gardette
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对于50米以上的工业饱和潜水,Heliox (He-O2)现在通常用作呼吸气体混合物。这种潜水后的减压已经在动物(迷你猪、猴子)和人类身上进行了彻底的研究。结果表明,在给定的上升速度下,多普勒法检测到的气泡数量随最大深度的增加而增加。减压事故的发生率也有相同的趋势。这一发现促使我们从1979年开始采用较慢的解压速度。此外,我们修改了上升剖面,在给定的分氧压力下使用线性减压来保持恒定的速度。在我们的研究项目Hydra中,我们用氢代替了呼吸气体混合物中的部分氦。因此,在Hydra V(1985)实验期间,我们能够在450到200米之间进行第一次氢饱和减压。在我们接下来的潜水研究项目Hydra VI(1986)中,8名潜水员在Hydreliox (H2-He-O2)混合物中进行减压,从500米到300米,通过化学方法去除氢。为此,我们使用了我们工程团队开发的脱氢装置。减压过程没有任何困难,只检测到少量气泡。因此,对氢和氦使用非常相似的减压速度是可能的。在小鼠身上进行了验证性实验,我们将它们暴露在2000米深的Hydreliox (H2-He-O2)下,得到了很好的结果。这使我们有可能在小动物身上进行气体交换研究,并将结果推断到人类身上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Decompression of deep divers].

For industrial saturation dives over 50 m, Heliox (He-O2) is now used routinely as respiratory gas mix. The decompression after such dives has been investigated thoroughly as well on the animal (minipig, monkeys) as on humans. Results show that for a given ascending speed, the number of bubbles detectable by the Doppler method in the bloodstream rises according to the maximal depth. The incidence of decompression accidents follows the same trend. This finding prompted us to adopt since 1979 slower decompression speeds. Moreover we modified the ascension profile, using henceforth a linear decompression in maintaining a constant speed for a given partial oxygen pressure. For our research program Hydra, we replaced in part Helium by Hydrogen in the respiratory gas mix. We were thus able to do the first hydrogen saturation decompression between 450 and 200 meters, during our Hydra V (1985) experiment. During our following diving research program Hydra VI (1986), 8 divers were decompressed under Hydreliox (H2-He-O2) mix from 500 to 300 m by eliminating hydrogen by chemical means. We used for this purpose a dehydrogenation apparatus developed by our engineering team. These decompressions took place without any difficulty and only a low number of bubbles detected. It is therefore possible to use decompression speeds for hydrogen and helium which are very similar. A confirmatory experiment on mice, where we exposed them to a 2000 m depth dive under Hydreliox (H2-He-O2), gave good results. This gives us the possibility, to perform gas exchange studies on small animals and to extrapolate the results to humans.

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