
@article{ref1,
title="Hana Kai II: a 17-day dry saturation dive at 18.6 ATA. I. Objectives, design, and scope",
journal="Undersea biomedical research",
year="1977",
author="Hong, S. K. and Smith, R. M. and Webb, P. and Matsuda, M.",
volume="4",
number="3",
pages="211-220",
abstract="The dive (Hana Kai II) described in these papers was designed to determine the effects on man of a prolonged exposure to a dry helium-oxygen hyperbaric environment. Comprehensive studies on energy balance, body fluid balance, cardiorespiratory functions, maximal oxygen uptake, psychological performance, and physiological responses to cold were performed at a simulated depth of 580 ft (18.6 ATA) over a 30-day period in March-April 1975. Following a 3-day predive control period at 1 ATA air (period 1), 5 male divers spent 17 days at 18.6 ATA in a helium-oxygen environment (periods 2-6), and returned to 1 ATA air after 7 days of decompression (periods 7-8). They stayed an additional 3 days inside the chamber for postdive control measurements (period 9). The chamber temperature was maintained at 25-27 degrees C during periods 1 and 9, 30-31 degrees C during periods 2-5, and 27-28 degrees C during period 6. At 18.6 ATA, the PO2 and PCO2 of the chamber gas were maintained at approximately 225 and 2 mmHg, respectively. In this introductory paper, physical and physiological characteristics of individual subjects, the major daily activity schedule, and the scope of investigation are presented.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0093-5387",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}