Search
SectionsIndexFirst Aid
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ
  • Emergencies
  • Cardiac Arrest
  • Choking
  • Drowning
  • Injuries
  • Altitude Illness
  • Bee Stings
  • Bites, Animal
  • Bites, Human
  • Bites, Snake
  • Burns
  • Electrical Injuries
  • Eye, Blunt Injury to
  • Eye, Chemical Burns of
  • Fractures
  • Frostbite
  • Head Injury
  • Heatstroke
  • Hypoithermia
  • Lightning Injuries
  • Shock
  • Sprains and Strains
  • Wounds
In This Topic
Injuries and Poisoning
Diving and Compressed Air Injuries
Air Embolism
Symptoms
Diagnosis
Treatment
Back to Top
Resources
  • About The Merck Manual Home Health Handbook Online Version
  • Anatomical Drawings
  • The One-Page Merck Manual of Health
  • Multimedia
  • Pronunciations
  • Selected Links
  • Weights and Measures
  • Common Medical Tests
  • Drug Names: Generic and Trade
  • Resources for Help and Information
Manuals available online
'/professional/index.html' + bookPageLink
 
'/home/index.html'
These and other Manuals available
in print, online, and as mobile applications.

See more at MerckManuals.com
Sections in Patients & Caregivers
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
Chapters in Injuries and Poisoning
  • First Aid
  • Burns
  • Fractures
  • Facial Injuries
  • Injuries to the Eye
  • Abdominal Injuries
  • Injury to the Urinary Tract
  • Head Injuries
  • Sports Injuries
  • Heat Disorders
  • Cold Injuries
  • Radiation Injury
  • Electrical and Lightning Injuries
  • Drowning
  • Diving and Compressed Air Injuries
  • Motion Sickness
  • Altitude Illness
  • Poisoning
  • Bites and Stings
Topics in Diving and Compressed Air Injuries
  • Overview of Diving Injuries
  • Barotrauma
  • Air Embolism
  • Decompression Sickness
  • Immersion Pulmonary Edema
  • Gas Toxicity During Diving
  • Recompression Therapy
  • Diving Precautions and Prevention of Diving Injuries
 
  • Merck Manual
  • >
  • Patients & Caregivers
  • >
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • >
  • Diving and Compressed Air Injuries
  • 4
 
Air Embolism

Share This

Air embolism is blockage of blood supply to organs caused by bubbles in an artery.

  • Within a few minutes of reaching the surface, divers can develop symptoms similar to those of a stroke.
  • People are given oxygen, made recumbent, and sent as soon as possible to a recompression chamber.

Air bubbles can enter the blood after pulmonary barotrauma (see Diving and Compressed Air Injuries: Pulmonary Barotrauma) or decompression sickness (see Diving and Compressed Air Injuries: Decompression Sickness) and travel to any organ in the body and block small blood vessels, most commonly those of the brain, but also of the heart, skin, and kidneys. A very large air embolism can block flow through the heart chambers or the large arteries.

Symptoms

Air embolism is a leading cause of death among divers. Symptoms of air embolism usually appear within a few minutes of reaching the surface. Air embolism to the brain often resembles a stroke, resulting in confusion and partial paralysis or loss of sensation. Some people have sudden loss of consciousness or seizures. Severe air embolism can lead to shock (see Shock) and death.

Diagnosis

Divers who lose consciousness during ascent or very shortly afterward are assumed to have air embolism. They must be treated promptly. Imaging tests are sometimes done but are not always reliable.

Treatment

People are immediately put in a recumbent position and given oxygen. They must be returned at once to a high-pressure environment, so that the air bubbles are compressed and forced to dissolve in the blood. Many medical centers have high-pressure (recompression or hyperbaric) chambers for this purpose.

Flying, even at a low altitude, reduces atmospheric pressure and allows bubbles to expand further, but it can be justified if it saves substantial time in getting people to a suitable chamber. If possible, people should fly in a plane pressurized to sea level, or the plane should not fly above 2,000 feet (610 meters).

Last full review/revision February 2009 by Alfred A. Bove, MD, PhD

Buy the Book

Mobile Versions

Pronunciations

embolism

Back to Top

Previous: Barotrauma

Next: Decompression Sickness

Audio
Figures
Photographs
Pronunciations
Sidebar
Tables
Videos

Copyright     © 2010-2013 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A.    Privacy    Terms of Use