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Lethal event in scuba diving with self-contained breathing apparatus: a forensic study
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Introduction: In fatal accidents during scuba diving it is necessary to differentiate a death from primary drowning from a secondary drowning death primarily due to other etiopathogenetic factors. The inhalation of water can only be the end point of a series of events alone capable of causing the diver’s exitus. The aim of this study is demonstrate that even low-risk heart diseases in daily life become potentially fatal during scuba diving. Methods: In this case series we describe all cases of death in the course of diving that came to the observation of the Forensic Institute of the University of Bari over a period of 20 years (2000-2020). Judicial autopsy was performed on all subjects with ancillary execution of histological and toxicological investigations. Results: The results of the medicolegal investigations carried out in the complex identified heart failure with acute myocardial infarction as the cause of death in four cases characterized by severe myocardiocoronarosclerosis, a primary drowning in a subject without previous pathological substrate in one case, and a terminal atrial fibrillation induced by acute dynamic heart failure due to functional overload of the right ventricle in one case Conclusion: Our study demonstrates that lethal events during diving are often related to the presence of unrecognized or subclinical cardiovascular diseases. Such deaths could be prevented and avoided if a greater regulatory sensitivity to the prevention and control of diving was encouraged, considering both the inherent risks of this activity and the possible unrecognized or underestimated pathologies.
Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society (UHMS)
Title: Lethal event in scuba diving with self-contained breathing apparatus: a forensic study
Description:
Introduction: In fatal accidents during scuba diving it is necessary to differentiate a death from primary drowning from a secondary drowning death primarily due to other etiopathogenetic factors.
The inhalation of water can only be the end point of a series of events alone capable of causing the diver’s exitus.
The aim of this study is demonstrate that even low-risk heart diseases in daily life become potentially fatal during scuba diving.
Methods: In this case series we describe all cases of death in the course of diving that came to the observation of the Forensic Institute of the University of Bari over a period of 20 years (2000-2020).
Judicial autopsy was performed on all subjects with ancillary execution of histological and toxicological investigations.
Results: The results of the medicolegal investigations carried out in the complex identified heart failure with acute myocardial infarction as the cause of death in four cases characterized by severe myocardiocoronarosclerosis, a primary drowning in a subject without previous pathological substrate in one case, and a terminal atrial fibrillation induced by acute dynamic heart failure due to functional overload of the right ventricle in one case Conclusion: Our study demonstrates that lethal events during diving are often related to the presence of unrecognized or subclinical cardiovascular diseases.
Such deaths could be prevented and avoided if a greater regulatory sensitivity to the prevention and control of diving was encouraged, considering both the inherent risks of this activity and the possible unrecognized or underestimated pathologies.
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