Barryattle
Contributor
I'm posting this because I think it could help a lot of people and my search didn't really turn up anything on ScubaBoard addressing this directly.
I'm a doc who dives, but not a diving medicine doc. I have Raynaud's syndrome (fingers and toes turn cold, numb, dead white, and useless when cold) and had worried when I started diving (in the PNW) that it would stop me from diving. Dry gloves with 2 insulating gloves helped some, but I often came up with numb, useless fingers (and toes). As a doc, I knew that dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (e.g., amlodipine, nifedipine, felodipine - generally used for high blood pressure and/or angina) often are helpful as they can prevent smooth muscle spasm that causes the small arteries to clamp down too much. For me, it is a night-and-day difference - I just take 1 dose several hours before diving. Yes, I still overinsulate a bit to prevent my core from getting cold (which can trigger attacks), but no more ending up with dead, useless fingers. (I also use it if I am going to go skiing and, for a day, I feel like a normal person with warm fingers and toes.)
I have recommended several divers to ask their docs for a prescription when this has come up in conversation and have gotten very positive feedback about the results. But I am puzzled that almost nobody seems aware of this treatment, or even that the problem is often treatable. So, unless the Duke folks jump in to say that, for some reason I am not aware of, this could be dangerous, I thought it deserved a thread here to make it easier for folks to find this information and maybe make their diving much more enjoyable, and safer.
I'm a doc who dives, but not a diving medicine doc. I have Raynaud's syndrome (fingers and toes turn cold, numb, dead white, and useless when cold) and had worried when I started diving (in the PNW) that it would stop me from diving. Dry gloves with 2 insulating gloves helped some, but I often came up with numb, useless fingers (and toes). As a doc, I knew that dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (e.g., amlodipine, nifedipine, felodipine - generally used for high blood pressure and/or angina) often are helpful as they can prevent smooth muscle spasm that causes the small arteries to clamp down too much. For me, it is a night-and-day difference - I just take 1 dose several hours before diving. Yes, I still overinsulate a bit to prevent my core from getting cold (which can trigger attacks), but no more ending up with dead, useless fingers. (I also use it if I am going to go skiing and, for a day, I feel like a normal person with warm fingers and toes.)
I have recommended several divers to ask their docs for a prescription when this has come up in conversation and have gotten very positive feedback about the results. But I am puzzled that almost nobody seems aware of this treatment, or even that the problem is often treatable. So, unless the Duke folks jump in to say that, for some reason I am not aware of, this could be dangerous, I thought it deserved a thread here to make it easier for folks to find this information and maybe make their diving much more enjoyable, and safer.