How does Decompression Illness present?
Bubbles can form in or move to most parts of the body and so decompression illness can present with almost any clinical picture. In 90% of cases symptoms present within 6 hours of a dive. The sooner, after ascent, that a diver notices a problem, the more likely it is to be DCI and usually the worse the prognosis.
These are some of the more common presentations:
- Limb or joint pain often a toothache type pain, usually not worse on movement or palpation
- Girdle pain pain coming from the back and spreading to the abdomen
- Neurological symptoms tingling, numbness, weakness, change in behaviour or personality, poor co-ordination, loss of bowel or bladder control, changes in hearing or vision, memory loss, unconsciousness
- Chest pain or breathing difficulties this could suggest a pneumothorax, gas within the coronary vessels or immersion pulmonary oedema.
- Rash often a mottled rash called cutis marmorata. This can precede a more severe neurological DCI. It is recommended to take a photograph of the rash as it can disappear quickly before the patient sees a dive physician.
- Audio vestibular hearing loss, balance and co-ordination problems, vertigo and vomiting. Audio-vestibular bends are difficult to differentiate from inner ear barotrauma.
- Not quite right(Constitutional symptoms) malaise, headache, lethargy, loss of appetite, apathy etc. This can also include cognitive symptoms with a reduced MMSE score.