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Barotrauma typically occurs to air spaces within a body when that body moves to or from a higher pressure environment, such as when a SCUBA diver, a free-diving diver or an aeroplane passenger ascends or descends.
The reason that barotrauma occurs in body spaces is that gases are compressible, so, they provide the air space with little support to resist a difference between the internal and external pressure. Boyle's law defines the relationship between the volume of the air space and the ambient pressure.
Examples of organs or tissues easily damaged by barotrauma due to diving are:
The term 'squeeze' describes pain on descent and affects the ears, sinuses, eyes and the skin. Lung pressure damage normally only occurs on ascent where the high pressure gas in the lung causes it to expand. One of the reasons lung damage happens is the lungs do not sense pain during when over-expanded.
When diving the pressure differences needed to cause the barotrauma come from two sources:
Diving barotrauma can be avoided by eliminating any pressure differences acting on the tissue or organ by equalising the pressure. The Valsalva manoeuvre can be used to equalise the ears. Regular and frequent breathing can help equalise the lungs. Exhaling into the mask can equalise the pressure inside the mask to avoid squeeze.
Diving