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- Asphyxiants: Simple and Chemical
- Inert Gas Narcosis -An Introduction
- Henry's Law and the Bends Scuba Divers Must Be Very Conscious Of
- Introduction to the Ideal Gas Law Description: Practice Using the Ideal Gas Law with a Series of Questions in Which All but Two Gas Parameters Are Held Fixed
- Hypercapnia in Diving: a Review of CO2 Retention in Submersed Exercise at Depth Sophia A
- Diving Medicine Issues
- Inhaled Toxins Lewis S
- Gases: a Review Kinetic Molecule Theory (KMT): Traits of an Ideal Gas
- Inert Gas Narcosis and Underwater Activities James E Clark
- Diving Physiology and Decompression Sickness: Considerations from Humans and Marine Animals Michael A
- A Case of Decompression Illness Not Responding to Hyperbaric Oxygen Asadullah Naqvi1* and Derrick Clarence2
- Nitrogen Narcosis
- Traveler Information
- Carbon Dioxide, Narcosis, and Diving by Johnny Brian, Department of Anesthesia, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics
- Pupillometry Is Not Sensitive to Gas Narcosis in Divers Breathing Hyperbaric Air Or Normobaric Nitrous Oxide
- Physical Science 1. Often Diving Accidents Occur Because the Diver
- Diving Physics Sources
- Diving Physiology
- The Effects of Underwater Exercise, Nitrogen Narcosis and Exercise
- Decompression Sickness and Recreational Scuba Divers H Nakayama, M Shibayama, N Yamami, S Togawa, M Takahashi, Y Mano
- Autopsy & the Investigation of Scuba Diving Fatalities
- Special Session on Cold Water Diving
- Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine the Journal of the South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society and the European Underwater and Baromedical Society
- The Cartesian Diver
- Inert Gas Narcosis in Scuba Diving, Different Gases Different Reactions
- Non-Pulmonary Barotrauma
- Dangers of Diving