词条 | Haldane's decompression model | ||||||
释义 |
| width = 125 | footer = Haldane's Decompression Tables I and II | image1 = Haldane's_Decompression_table-I_in_ft_and_psi.jpg | alt1 = Table I | caption1 = Decompression table-I in ft and psi. "Stoppages during the ascent of a diver after ordinary limits of time from surface." | image2 = Haldane's_Decompression_table-II_in_ft_and_psi.jpg | alt2 = Table II | caption2 = Decompression table-II in ft and psi. "Stoppages during the ascent of a diver after delay beyond the ordinary limits of time from surface." Haldane's decompression model is a decompression table for diving at sea level that was proposed in 1908 by the eminent Scottish physiologist, John Scott Haldane (2 May 1860 – 14/15 March 1936),[1] who was famous for intrepid self-experimentation. Haldane experimented on goats and prepared the first recognized decompression table for the British Admiralty in 1908 based on extensive experiments on goats and other animals using a clinical endpoint of symptomatic DCS. Haldane observed that goats, saturated to depths of {{convert|165|ft|m}} of sea water, did not develop decompression sickness (DCS) if subsequent decompression was limited to half the ambient pressure. Haldane constructed schedules which limited the critical supersaturation ratio to "2", in five hypothetical body tissue compartments characterized by their halftime. Halftime is also termed Half-life when linked to exponential processes such as radioactive decay. Haldane's five compartments (halftimes: 5, 10, 20, 40, 75 minutes) were employed in decompression calculations and staged procedures for fifty years. Previous theories to Haldane worked on "uniform compression", as Paul Bert pointed in 1878 that very slow decompression could avoid the caisson disease, then Hermann von Schrötter defined in 1895 the safe "uniform decompression" rate to be of "one atmosphere per 20 minutes". Haldane in 1907 worked on "staged Decompression" and proved it to be safer than "uniform decompression" and produced his decompression tables on that basis. {{clear}}Previous work| width = | footer = Previous work to John Scott Haldane | image1 = | alt1 = Hermann von Schrötter. | width1= 220 | caption1 = Hermann von Schrötter. drawn by Hans von Schrötter (family owned). B. Mader. | image2 = Paul_Bert2.jpg | alt2 = Paul Bert | caption2 = Paul Bert. | width2= 145 Paul BertPaul Bert (17 October 1833 – 11 November 1886) was a French physiologist graduated at Paris as doctor of medicine in 1863, and doctor of science in 1866. He was appointed professor of physiology successively at Bordeaux (1866) and the Sorbonne (1869). Paul Bert was given the nickname of "Father of Aviation Medicine" after his work, La Pression barometrique (1878), a comprehensive investigation on the physiological effects of air-pressure, which pointed out that the symptoms of caisson disease could be avoided by means of very slow decompression. However, his work did not furnish data about safe decompression rates.[2][3]SchrötterAnton Hermann Victor Thomas Schrötter (5 August 1870 – 6 January 1928), an Austrian physiologist and physician who was a native of Vienna, was a pioneer of aviation and hyperbaric medicine,[4] and made important contributions in the study of decompression sickness. He studied medicine and natural sciences at the Universities of Vienna and Strasbourg, earning his medical degree in 1894, and during the following year receiving his doctorate of philosophy. He was active in many fields of medicine and physiology. His first interest from 1895 was the investigation and combating of caisson disease, and during his tenure in Nussdorf he studied the numerous diseases that have occurred and was looking for ways of treatment and prevention. His published report in 1900 with Dr. Richard Heller and Dr. Wilhelm Mager, on air pressure disease is considered the basic German-language work of diving and hyperbaric medicine. Schrötter, Heller and Mager framed rules for safe decompression and believed that the decompression rate of one atmosphere (atm) per 20 minutes would be safe. Hill and Greenwood decompressed themselves without serious symptoms after exposure to {{convert|6|atm|abbr=on}}. Haldane's workThe Admiralty Committee needed to frame definite rules for safe decompression in the shortest possible time for deep diving, and hence, Haldane was commissioned in 1905 by the UK Royal Navy for this purpose, to design decompression tables for divers ascending from deep water. In 1907 Haldane made a decompression chamber to help make deep-sea divers safer and produced the first decompression tables after extensive experiments with animals. In 1908 Haldane published the first recognized decompression table for the British Admiralty. His tables remained in use by the Royal Navy till 1955. "The Prevention of Compressed Air Illness" was published in 1908 by Haldane, Boycott and Damant recommending staged decompression.[5] These tables were accepted for use by the Royal Navy. Haldane introduced the concept of half-times to model the uptake and release of nitrogen into the blood in different body tissues, and suggested five body tissue compartments with half times of 5, 10, 20, 40 and 75 minutes. In his hypothesis, Haldane predicted that if the ascent rate does not allow the partial pressure of the inert gas (nitrogen) in each of the hypothetical tissues to exceed the environmental pressure by more than twice (2:1 ratio), then bubbles will not form in these tissues. Basically this meant that one could ascend from a depth of {{convert|30|m|-1}}{{snd}}an ambient pressure of {{convert|4|bar|psi|-1}}{{snd}}to {{convert|10|m}} ({{convert|2|bar|psi}}) or from {{convert|10|m}} ({{convert|2|bar|psi|-1}}) to the surface ({{convert|1|bar|psi}}) when saturated, without a decompression problem. To ensure this, a number of decompression stops were incorporated into the ascent tables. The ascent rate and the fastest tissue in the model determine the time and depth of the first stop. Thereafter, the slower tissues determine when it is safe to ascend further. OutlineHaldane ran his experiments on some animals, illustrating the difference between different kinds of animals such as goats, guinea-pigs, mice, rats, hens and rabbits, but his main work and results were taken on goats and men. Haldane stated in his book "In order to avoid the risk of bubbles being formed on decompression, it has hitherto been recommended that decompression should be slow and at as nearly a uniform rate throughout as possible. We must therefore carefully consider the process of desaturation of the body during slow and uniform decompression",{{Citation needed|date=May 2015}} hence the outline of his work is noted:
Main results of Haldane’s workThis work is published in "The Prevention of Compressed-air Illness" book. Results are published in same book under "Summary" in pages 424 and 425. The main conclusions of his decompression model are:
Further developments on Haldane's principlesThe 2:1 ratio proposed by Haldane was found to be too conservative for fast tissues (short dives) and not conservative enough for slow tissues (long dives). The ratio also seemed to vary with depth. The ascent rates used on older tables were {{convert|18|m/min}}, but newer tables now use {{convert|9|m/min}}.{{Citation needed|date=May 2015}}
Haldane's related work and research| width = | footer = John Scott Haldane | image1 = Haldane_in_his_laboratory_at_Oxford,_1911.jpg | alt1 = Haldane 1911 | caption1 = J. S. Haldane at his laboratory in Oxford, May 1920. Portrait Collection, Boston Medical Library in the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine. | width1= 248 | image2 = John_Scott_Haldane_1910.jpg | alt2 = Haldane 1920 | caption2 = John Scott Haldane in 1910 | width2= 140 Haldane had many other related researches:
TN2 = T0 + (Tf – T0) (1–0.5^{(t/t0)}) where, T: tension (pressure) of gas in tissues T0: initial tension TN2: current nitrogen tension Tf: final tension t0: chamber period {{clear}}t: current time Contradicting workAlthough Haldane's model remains the basis for modern decompression tables, Haldane's first decompression tables proved to be far from ideal. Haldane's equation is used by many dive tables and dive computers today, even though, a growing number of decompression models contradict its assumptions such as the
Figures and tables from "The Prevention of Compressed-air Illness"References1. ^"The United States Navy Experimental Diving Unit" 2. ^[https://hagstromerlibrary.ki.se/books/1537 La pression barométrique. Recherches de physiologie expérimentale. ] 3. ^{{cite journal | pmid = 360338 | volume=34 | issue=1 | title="La Pression barométrique": Paul Bert's hypoxia theory and its critics | journal=Respir Physiol | pages=1–28 | last1 = Kellogg | first1 = RH | doi=10.1016/0034-5687(78)90046-4| year=1978 }} 4. ^Die Familie Schrötter 5. ^1 {{Cite journal |date=June 1908 |journal=The Journal of Hygiene |volume=8 |pages=342–443 |number=3|pmid=20474365 |pmc=2167126 |last1=Boycott |first1=A. E. |title=The Prevention of Compressed-air Illness |last2=Damant |first2=G. C. |last3=Haldane |first3=J. S. |url=http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/7489 | doi=10.1017/S0022172400003399 }} 6. ^[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/journals/336/ Archive of "The Journal of Hygiene".] External links
1 : Diving decompression |
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