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Diving and Dive Computer History

2018
Dive computers are useful tools across recreational and technical diving. They are supplanting traditional dive tables and their use is growing as diving research advances. Able to process depth-time readings in fractions of a second, modern dive computers routinely estimate hypothetical dissolved gas loadings, bubble buildup, ascent and descent rates,
B. R. Wienke, T. R. O’Leary
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Women and Diving

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1981
In brief: Women who want to scuba dive should be physically fit and should not be overly dependent on a male diving buddy. In his discussion on diving and menstruation, the author says that postmenopausal women can dive safely, and those who are menstruating can dive within the limits of their comfort.
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Diving Headache

Current Pain and Headache Reports, 2019
This review will focus on the most recent information regarding the ICHD-3 definition of diving headache as well as other important causes of diving headache that are not listed in the ICHD-3 classification system. The paper will discuss etiology, diagnosis, and management of these disorders, focusing, when possible, on the newest research available ...
John Glenn, Burkett, Stephanie J, Nahas
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Diving Medicine

Clinics in Sports Medicine, 1987
This article orients the practicing physician to the physical and physiologic basis for the more common medical problems encountered in diving, discusses the common presenting manifestations for these disorders, and provides a framework for their treatment. Medical fitness for diving is also briefly addressed.
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Neurology and diving

2014
Diving exposes a person to the combined effects of increased ambient pressure and immersion. The reduction in pressure when surfacing can precipitate decompression sickness (DCS), caused by bubble formation within tissues due to inert gas supersaturation.
E Wayne, Massey, Richard E, Moon
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Diving Medicine

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1984
This discussion focuses on the several pressure-related syndromes that are peculiar to diving and that are collectively known as dysbarism. These include barotrauma of descent, barotrauma of ascent, and air embolism. Also considered are nitrogen narcosis and decompression sickness.
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Diving Medicine

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1992
Although the diving community attempts to train and educate its members with regard to the dangers of the deep, there are still a significant number of individuals each year who need treatment for painful and life-threatening illness incurred as a result of the dive.
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[Diving Accidents].

Pneumologie (Stuttgart, Germany), 2017
Decompression injuries occur on account of the special hyperbaric effects during the emerge phase and require superior therapeutic knowledge. Vitally important is emergency treatment with high concentrated oxygen at an early stage. Sever decompression injuries require oxygenation in a hyperbaric treatment chamber.
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Diving injuries

The Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1984
This is a collective review about the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of SCUBA and diving injuries by the emergency physician. These injuries can be classified into those resulting from the toxic effects of the inhaled gas, from the pressure changes in the water and gas mixture while diving, and from decompression sickness.
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DIVING ACCIDENTOLOGY AS A MAINSTREAM OF DIVING AND DIVING MEDICINE

Aerospace and Environmental Medicine, 2018
V.N. Sementsov, I.V. Ivanov
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