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RESEARCH, EDUCATION & MEDICINE

EXPERT OPINIONS

66

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WINTER 2017

c.

Mild TBI and recovery months, but less than one

year, later:

No diving for one full year

after

complete

symptom resolution.

d.

Mild TBI and continuing symptoms:

The symptoms

may be a problem for diving. For example, vertigo and

dizziness may be made worse on a boat. Vertigo may

cause nausea, which may be incompatible with safe

diving. Exposure to cold may make migraines worse.

Diving can be a significant stressor, so anxiety and

posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are disqualifiers.

Cognitive problems may interfere with divers’ ability

to interpret their dive computer or follow directions

properly. Any drugs a diver takes must be reviewed with

specific advice about diving. Any symptoms warrant

evaluation by brain-injury and dive-medicine specialists.

All diving is not the same. Diving in relatively shallow,

clear, warmwater without current is very different from

cold, rough water with poor visibility. Recommendations

for diving should specify the type of diving.

Massey:

When symptoms resolve early I suggest

waiting a week, but the longer the symptoms persist,

the longer I would delay diving. Symptom duration is

important in determining how long one should avoid

sports, including diving.

With a mild concussion, when symptoms resolve

within one day, diving within a week of resolution is

appropriate. If symptoms go on for a month, then diving

does not seem wise until after resolution and a period

of observation and medical reassessment, especially

with any symptoms beyond a headache. Any persistent

cognitive symptoms such as poor concentration would

require further observation and a conservative return

to activity. Rest and good sleep are reported to be

helpful. Subsequent neurological evaluation must assess

attention, orientation, judgment, insight and memory.

A CT scan is almost never helpful; an MRI should be

conducted when a clinical examination suggests bleeding

in the brain. An electroencephalogram (EEG) should be

considered in the event of persistent symptoms.

Alleman:

From a commercial diving standpoint,

staying out of the water for at least six weeks would be

recommended, provided that the diver has a normal

neurological examination after this delay. From a

recreational standpoint, a longer period of time may be

considered since the individual is not compelled to dive

from a financial standpoint.

Are there any possible benefits of diving for

patients with a mild TBI?

Weaver:

There is no scientific proof that patients with

mild TBI gain improvement by diving.

Massey:

I doubt the existence of benefits based on

present information.

Alleman:

There is no medical literature that supports

diving as beneficial for patients with mild TBI.

What are the main fitness-to-dive concerns with TBI?

Weaver:

Headaches following mild TBI are common.

They can interfere with attention and concentration and

sometimes affect vision, which might make reading a

dive computer screen challenging.

Massey:

One of the main concerns is cognitive

impairment, which relates to judgment, awareness

and reasoning. Will the diver make mistakes that he

or she otherwise would not, and will that affect the

diver’s safety?

Seizure risk varies with the degree of injury, but a

significant seizure risk would rule out further diving.

Whether the risk of a seizure is permanently elevated

in the postconcussive state is unknown. It is likewise

unknown whether there is a difference in the risk of

complex partial, simple partial, generalized, absence

and other types of seizures.

STEPHEN FRINK