Circulating venous bubbles after dives are associated with symptoms of decompression
sickness in adults. Up to now it is not known to what extent children and adolescents
are subjected to a bubble formation during their shallow dives and if there are possible
indications for that. The aim of this pilot study is to investigate whether bubbles
and/or symptoms occur after standardised repeated dives performed by young divers.
28 children and adolescents (13.5±1.1 years) carried out two 25 min dives to a depth
of 10 m with a 90 min surface interval. Before and after, echocardiographic data were
recorded and evaluated with regard to circulating bubbles with an extended Eftedal-Brubakk-Scale
by 2 different examiners. Bubbles were observed for a total of 6 subjects, Grade I
(n=5) and Grade III (n=1). None of them showed any symptoms of decompression sickness.
No differences were established regarding potential influencing factors on bubble
formation between the groups with and without bubbles. The results indicate that even
relatively shallow and short dives can generate venous bubbles in children and adolescents.
To what extent this relates to the decompression sickness or clinical symptoms cannot
be validated at this point.
Key words
circulating venous bubbles - echocardiography - repeated dives - bubble formation
- children and adolescents - decompression sickness