Huang K L, Lee H C, Huang G B, Lin T F, Niu K C, Liou S H, Lin Y C
Institute of Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine, National Defense Medical Center, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC.
Undersea Hyperb Med. 1998 Summer;25(2):99-109.
Construction well divers in Taiwan reportedly suffer a high prevalence of dysbaric osteonecrosis. We studied five divers working at the same construction site. We recorded their diving methods, diving depths, bottom times, work patterns, water temperatures, and heart rates. We also monitored gas bubbles in the subclavian vein in selected dives. A crude but effective hot-water system protected divers against hypothermia and allowed them to work in 24 degrees-27 degrees C water. Divers worked approximately 6.6 h a day and progressed approximately 3.0 m a day while excavating an average of 148 buckets of sand and rock each weighing 49.5 kg. The divers sustained a heart rate increase of 49%. Sixty percent of their equivalent single dive bottom times exceeded the U.S. Navy's no-decompression limits. Two cases of venous bubbles were detected, and one of these divers showed symptoms of decompression sickness. The prolonged bottom time and lack of a decompression schedule probably contributed to a risk of decompression sickness and dysbaric osteonecrosis.
据报道,台湾地区的建筑潜水员患减压性骨坏死的比例很高。我们对在同一建筑工地工作的五名潜水员进行了研究。我们记录了他们的潜水方法、潜水深度、水底停留时间、工作模式、水温及心率。我们还在选定的潜水中监测了锁骨下静脉中的气泡。一种简陋但有效的热水系统保护潜水员免受体温过低之苦,并使他们能够在24摄氏度至27摄氏度的水中工作。潜水员每天工作约6.6小时,每天推进约3.0米,同时平均挖掘148桶重49.5千克的沙石。潜水员的心率增加了49%。他们等效单次潜水水底停留时间的60%超过了美国海军的免减压极限。检测到两例静脉气泡,其中一名潜水员出现减压病症状。水底停留时间过长以及缺乏减压计划可能导致了减压病和减压性骨坏死的风险。