Butler F K, Thalmann E D
Undersea Biomed Res. 1986 Jun;13(2):193-223.
Central nervous system oxygen toxicity is currently the limiting factor in underwater swimming/diving operations using closed-circuit oxygen equipment. A dive series was conducted at the Navy Experimental Diving Unit in Panama City, FL, to determine whether these limits can be safely extended and also to evaluate the feasibility of making excursions to increased depth after a previous transit at a shallower depth for various lengths of time. A total of 465 man-dives were conducted on 14 different experimental profiles. In all, 33 episodes of oxygen toxicity were encountered, including 2 convulsions. Symptoms were classified as probable, definite, or convulsion. Findings were as follows: symptom classification is a useful tool in evaluating symptoms of oxygen toxicity; safe exposure limits should generally be adjusted only as a result of definite symptoms or convulsions; the following single-depth dive limits are proposed: 20 fsw (6.1 msw)--240 min, 25 fsw (7.6 msw)--240 min, 30 fsw (9.1 msw)--80 min, 35 fsw (10.7 msw)--25 min, 40 fsw (12.2 msw)--15 min, 50 fsw (15.2 msw)--10 min; a pre-exposure of up to 4 h at 20 fsw causes only a slight increase in the probability of an oxygen toxicity symptom on subsequent downward excursions; a pre-exposure depth of 25 fsw will have a more adverse effect on subsequent excursions than will 20 fsw; a return to 20 fsw for periods of 95-110 min seems to provide an adequate recovery period from an earlier excursion and enables a second excursion to be taken without additional hazard; nausea was the most commonly noted symptom of oxygen toxicity, followed by muscle twitching and dizziness; dives on which oxygen toxicity episodes were noted had a more rapid rate of core temperature cooling than dives without toxicity episodes; several divers who had passed the U.S. Navy Oxygen Tolerance Test were observed to be reproducibly more susceptible to oxygen toxicity than the other experimental divers.
中枢神经系统氧中毒目前是使用闭路式氧气设备进行水下游泳/潜水作业的限制因素。在佛罗里达州巴拿马城的海军实验潜水单位进行了一系列潜水实验,以确定这些限制是否可以安全地延长,并评估在先前以不同时长在较浅深度停留后前往更深深度的可行性。总共按照14种不同的实验方案进行了465人次潜水。总共遇到了33次氧中毒事件,包括2次惊厥。症状分为可能、确定或惊厥三类。结果如下:症状分类是评估氧中毒症状的有用工具;安全暴露极限通常应仅因确定的症状或惊厥而调整;建议的单次深度潜水极限如下:20英尺海水深度(6.1米海水深度)——240分钟,25英尺海水深度(7.6米海水深度)——240分钟,30英尺海水深度(9.1米海水深度)——80分钟,35英尺海水深度(10.7米海水深度)——25分钟,40英尺海水深度(12.2米海水深度)——15分钟,50英尺海水深度(15.2米海水深度)——10分钟;在20英尺海水深度预先暴露长达4小时只会使后续下潜时出现氧中毒症状的概率略有增加;25英尺海水深度的预先暴露对后续下潜的不利影响比20英尺海水深度更大;返回20英尺海水深度95 - 110分钟似乎能从较早的下潜中提供足够的恢复时间,并能进行第二次下潜而无额外风险;恶心是氧中毒最常见的症状,其次是肌肉抽搐和头晕;记录到氧中毒事件的潜水比没有中毒事件的潜水核心体温冷却速度更快;观察到几名通过美国海军氧耐受测试的潜水员比其他实验潜水员更容易反复出现氧中毒。