• Diving Hyperb Med · Jun 2015

    Review

    The role of persistent foramen ovale and other shunts in decompression illness.

    • Peter T Wilmshurst.
    • Dr Wilmshurst was Guest Speaker at the SPUMS Annual Scientifi c Meeting, Bali, May 2014, Consultant Cardiologist, Royal Stoke University Hospital, Stoke-on-Trent ST4 6QG, UK, E-mail: peter.wilmshurst@tiscali.co.uk, Phone: +44-(0)1782-675982.
    • Diving Hyperb Med. 2015 Jun 1; 45 (2): 98-104.

    AbstractA persistent foramen ovale (PFO) and other types of right-to-left shunts are associated with neurological, cutaneous and cardiovascular decompression illness (DCI). A right-to-left shunt is particularly likely to be implicated in causation when these types of DCI occur after dives that are not provocative. It is believed that venous nitrogen bubbles that form after decompression pass through the shunt to circumvent the lung filter and invade systemic tissues supersaturated with nitrogen (or other inert gas) and as a result there is peripheral amplification of bubble emboli in those tissues. Approximately a quarter of the population have a PFO, but only a small proportion of the population with the largest right-to-left shunts are at high risk of shunt-mediated DCI. The increased risk of DCI in people with migraine with aura is because migraine with aura is also associated with right-to-left shunts and this increased risk of DCI appears to be confi ned to those with a large PFO or other large shunt. Various ultrasound techniques can be used to detect and assess the size of right-to-left shunts by imaging the appearance of bubble contrast in the systemic circulation after intravenous injection. In divers with a history of shunt-mediated DCI, methods to reduce the risk of recurrence include cessation of diving, modification of future dives to prevent venous bubble liberation and transcatheter closure of a PFO.

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