Influence of prehospital management on the outcome of spinal cord decompression sickness in scuba divers

Author:

Andre SophieORCID,Lehot Henri,Morin Jean,Louge Pierre,de Maistre Sébastien,Roffi Romain,Druelle Arnaud,Gempp Emmanuel,Vallée Nicolas,Vergne Muriel,Blatteau Jean-Eric

Abstract

BackgroundDecompression sickness (DCS) with spinal cord involvement has an unfortunately high rate of long-term sequelae. The objective of this study was to determine the association of prehospital variables on the outcome of spinal cord DCS, especially the influence of the initial clinical presentation and the time to recompression.MethodsThis was a retrospective study using prospectively collected data which included divers with spinal cord DCS seen at a single hyperbaric centre study from 2010 to 2018. Information regarding dive, latency of onset of symptoms, time to recompression and prehospital management, that is, use of oxygen, treatment and means of evacuation, were analysed as predictor variables. The initial clinical severity was estimated by the score of the French society of diving and hyperbaric medicine (MEDSUBHYP). The primary end point was the presence or absence of sequelae at discharge assessed by the modified score of the Japanese Orthopedic Association.Results195 divers (48±12 years, 42 women) were included. 34% had neurological sequelae at discharge. In multivariate analysis, a MEDSUBHYP score ≥6 and a time to recompression >194 min were significantly associated with incomplete neurological recovery (OR 9.5 (95% CI 4.6 to 19.8), p<0.0001 and OR 2.1 (95% CI 1.03 to 4.5), p=0.04, respectively). Time to recompression only appeared to be significant for patients with high initial clinical severity. As time to recompression increased, the level of sequelae also increased (p=0.014).ConclusionDetermining the initial clinical severity is critical in identifying patients who need to be evacuated for recompression as quickly as possible.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,General Medicine,Emergency Medicine

Reference25 articles.

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2. Vann RD , Freiberger JJ , Caruso JL . Report on decompression illness, diving fatalities and project dive exploration: dan’s annual review of recreational scuba diving injuries and fatalities based on 2003 Data. 2005 Edition. Durham, NC: Divers Alert Network, 2005: 138. ISBN 0-9673066-7-1

3. Risk factors and treatment outcome in scuba divers with spinal cord decompression sickness

4. Prognostic Factors of Spinal Cord Decompression Sickness in Recreational Diving: Retrospective and Multicentric Analysis of 279 Cases

5. Francis TJR , Mitchell SJ . Manisfestions of decompression disorders. In: Brubbak AO , Neuman TS , eds. The Bennett and Elliot’s physiology and medicine of diving. 5th edn. London: WB Saunders, 2003: 578–600.

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