Login / Signup

Cutis marmorata in decompression sickness is associated with a patent foramen ovale.

Christian Kenneth KerutJoseph R SerioEdmund Kenneth Kerut
Published in: Echocardiography (Mount Kisco, N.Y.) (2019)
A 39-year-old male commercial diver developed cutis marmorata after a dive. He had a full recovery after therapy in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed an atrial septal aneurysm and a large shunt during normal respirations. This form of decompression sickness may progress to type II DCS, thus is important to identify and treat. Cutis marmorata as a result of diving is highly associated with an atrial septal defect or a large patent foramen ovale. It is particularly important to assess these patients for a right-to-left shunt as part of a medical evaluation prior to returning to diving.
Keyphrases