1. Medical examination of divers after COVID-19 infection: a prospective, observational study using published (original and revised) guidelines for evaluation.
- Author
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Sadler, Charlotte, Lussier, Anna, Grover, Ian, Van Hoesen, Karen, and Lindholm, Peter
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Coronaviruses ,Lung ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Humans ,Diving ,COVID-19 ,Male ,Prospective Studies ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Adult ,Aged ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Young Adult ,Physical Examination ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Diving medicine ,Fitness to dive ,Medicals – diving ,Occupational diving ,Respiratory ,Zoology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
IntroductionThe COVID-19 pandemic raised significant concerns about fitness to dive due to potential damage to the pulmonary and cardiovascular systems. Our group previously published guidelines (original and revised) for assessment of these divers. Here, we report a prospective, observational study to evaluate the utility of these guidelines.MethodsRecreational, commercial, and scientific divers with a history of COVID-19 were consented and enrolled. Subjects were evaluated according to the aforementioned guidelines and followed for any additional complications or diving related injuries.ResultsOne-hundred and twelve divers (56 male, 56 female, ages 19-68) were enrolled: 59 commercial, 30 scientific, 20 recreational, two unknown (not documented), one military. Cases were categorised according to two previous guidelines ('original' n = 23 and 'revised' n = 89): category 0 (n = 6), category 0.5 (n = 64), category 1 (n = 38), category 2 (n = 2), category 3 (n = 1), uncategorisable due to persistent symptoms (n = 1). One hundred divers (89.3%) were cleared to return to diving, four (3.6%) were unable to return to diving, four (3.6%) were able to return to diving with restrictions, and four (3.6%) did not complete testing. Regarding diving related complications, one diver had an episode of immersion pulmonary oedema one year later and one diver presented with decompression sickness and tested positive for COVID-19.ConclusionsMost divers who presented for evaluation were able to return to diving safely. Abnormalities were detected in a small percentage of divers that precluded them from being cleared to dive. Guidelines were easily implemented by a variety of clinicians.
- Published
- 2024