Breath-Hold Diving-Related Decompression Sickness with Brain Involvement: From Neuroimaging to Pathophysiology.
José Manuel Sánchez-VillalobosMaría Lorenza Fortuna-AlcarazLaura Serrano-VelascoÁngel Pujante-EscuderoCarmen María Garnés-SánchezJorge Edverto Pérez-GarcilazoAgustín Olea-GonzálezJosé Antonio Pérez-VicentePublished in: Tomography (Ann Arbor, Mich.) (2022)
Central nervous system involvement related to decompression sickness (DCS) is a very rare complication of breath-hold diving. So far, it has been postulated that repeated dives with short surface intervals represent a key factor in the development of breath-holding-related DCS. We report the case of a breath-hold diver who, after repeated immersion, developed DCS with brain involvement. After treatment in a hyperbaric chamber, there was a clinical improvement in the symptoms. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showed hyperintense lesions in long-time repetition sequences (FLAIR, T2WI) in the left frontal and right temporal lobes. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) sequences and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map were characteristic of vasogenic edema, allowing us to exclude the ischemic nature of the process. These findings, together with the acute clinical presentation, the resolution of lesions in evolutionary radiological controls and the possible involvement of blood-brain barrier/endothelial dysfunction in DCS, could suggest a new form of posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES)-like presentation of DCS. This would represent a novel mechanism to explain the pathophysiology of this entity. We conducted a literature review, analyzing the pathophysiological and neuroimaging characteristics of DCS in breath-hold diving based on a case of this rare disease.
Keyphrases
- diffusion weighted imaging
- magnetic resonance imaging
- blood brain barrier
- cerebral ischemia
- contrast enhanced
- resting state
- white matter
- functional connectivity
- case report
- minimally invasive
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- drug induced
- gene expression
- brain injury
- early onset
- genome wide
- multiple sclerosis
- hepatitis b virus
- high density