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引用次数: 0
摘要
减压病是两种疾病(减压病(DCS)和动脉气体栓塞(AGE))的统称,这两种疾病可能在压缩气体潜水期间或浮出水面后出现。气泡被认为是这两种疾病的主要伤害媒介,但气泡的来源各不相同。在 DCS 中,气泡主要由在压缩气体潜水过程中溶解在组织中的惰性气体形成。在上升过程中和上升后("减压"),如果溶解气体的压力超过环境压力,就会在血管外空间或组织血管中形成小气泡,随后进入静脉循环。在 AGE 中,如果压缩气体在上升过程中滞留在肺部,肺气压创伤可能会将气泡直接引入肺静脉,然后进入全身动脉循环。在这两种情况下,气泡都可能对组织及其相关微循环造成缺血性、炎症性和机械性损伤。AGE 通常表现为类似中风的症状,可累及大脑,而 DCS 则可影响多个器官,包括大脑、脊髓、内耳、肌肉骨骼组织、心肺系统和皮肤,而且潜在症状的性质和严重程度都很复杂。本综述全面介绍了这两种疾病的病理生理学、表现、预防和治疗。
Decompression illness is a collective term for two maladies (decompression sickness [DCS] and arterial gas embolism [AGE]) that may arise during or after surfacing from compressed gas diving. Bubbles are the presumed primary vector of injury in both disorders, but the respective sources of bubbles are distinct. In DCS bubbles form primarily from inert gas that becomes dissolved in tissues over the course of a compressed gas dive. During and after ascent ('decompression'), if the pressure of this dissolved gas exceeds ambient pressure small bubbles may form in the extravascular space or in tissue blood vessels, thereafter passing into the venous circulation. In AGE, if compressed gas is trapped in the lungs during ascent, pulmonary barotrauma may introduce bubbles directly into the pulmonary veins and thence to the systemic arterial circulation. In both settings, bubbles may provoke ischaemic, inflammatory, and mechanical injury to tissues and their associated microcirculation. While AGE typically presents with stroke-like manifestations referrable to cerebral involvement, DCS can affect many organs including the brain, spinal cord, inner ear, musculoskeletal tissue, cardiopulmonary system and skin, and potential symptoms are protean in both nature and severity. This comprehensive overview addresses the pathophysiology, manifestations, prevention and treatment of both disorders.
期刊介绍:
Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine (DHM) is the combined journal of the South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society (SPUMS) and the European Underwater and Baromedical Society (EUBS). It seeks to publish papers of high quality on all aspects of diving and hyperbaric medicine of interest to diving medical professionals, physicians of all specialties, scientists, members of the diving and hyperbaric industries, and divers. Manuscripts must be offered exclusively to Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine, unless clearly authenticated copyright exemption accompaniesthe manuscript. All manuscripts will be subject to peer review. Accepted contributions will also be subject to editing.