Risk of neurological decompression sickness in the diver with a right-to-left shunt: literature review and meta-analysis
- PMID: 19423977
- DOI: 10.1097/JSM.0b013e31819b0fa2
Risk of neurological decompression sickness in the diver with a right-to-left shunt: literature review and meta-analysis
Abstract
Objective: Literature review and meta-analysis to review the evidence of relationship between the presence of right-to-left shunts (RLSs) and the occurrence of neurological decompression sickness (DCS) in divers.
Data sources: MEDLINE, Google Scholar, and Health Technology Assessment databases.
Study selection: Five case-control studies in which the prevalence of a RLS in a group of divers with neurological DCS was compared with that of a group of divers with no history of DCS, 3 cross-transversal studies in which the prevalence of RLS was measured in divers with neurological DCS, and 4 cross-transversal studies in which the prevalence of RLS was measured in divers with no history of DCS were reviewed.
Data extraction: Only case-control studies were retained for meta-analysis.
Data synthesis: This meta-analysis gathers 5 studies and 654 divers. The combined odds ratio of neurological DCS in divers with RLS was 4.23 (3.05-5.87). The meta-analysis including only large RLS found a combined odds ratio of 6.49 (4.34-9.71).
Conclusions: Because of a low incidence of neurological DCS, increase in absolute risk of neurological DCS due to RLS is probably small. Thus, in recreational diving, the systematic screening of RLS seems unnecessary. In professional divers, because of a chronic exposition and unknown consequences of cerebral asymptomatic lesions, these results raise again the benefit of the transcranial Doppler in the screening and quantification of the RLS, independently of their location.
Comment in
-
Decompression sickness with a right-to-left shunt.Clin J Sport Med. 2009 Nov;19(6):512-3; author reply 513. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0b013e3181bd1df9. Clin J Sport Med. 2009. PMID: 19898086 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical