Dr. Lecter
Contributor
Context: morning dive on a ledge running from 170' to 205' on EAN23, with 50% and 100% for deco. First dive of that day, but had conducted one shorter dive the previous afternoon to 175' on air with 100% for deco. Exposure protection was a lavacore with no hood, gloves, and a pair of shorts.
Dive was uneventful, dropped to the ledge rapidly and spent most of my 25 minutes of bottom time around 190' with a couple excursions to 200-205' to snag a giant spiny lobster/nearly lose my Scout light/look for sunrise shells. No signs of anything amiss at the bottom despite the fact I would have preferred straight air for a dive of this depth.
Ascended with the rest of the group to our first stop around 100', and moved from there at a pace about one stop behind the rest of the group (had a new backup Petrel on 20/75 that seemed to want more time than anyone else's plan, and I chose to humor it). Very clear water until 50' or so, with one big eagle ray and a bunch of drifty little translucent creatures in the water. Switched to 50% at 70' and ascent continued uneventfully; no current or swells to speak of, held all stops within a foot or so without much effort. Did lazy circles around the group on the drift float to amuse/warm myself.
Pulled up to the 20' stop, dialed in the buoyancy carefully in preparation of having a deco ceiling and a MOD floor that were very close together, and switched to the 100%. Was on the 100% for around 17 minutes without much incident other than a random swell drifting me to 23' for a second, with most of the time spent between 20' and 15', when I suddenly felt a stabbing, prickly pins & needles pain across the left side of my face.
Oh
, oncoming CNS hit! was my first thought, so I spat the O2 reg within a second or two of feeling the pain in my face and went to backgas, ascended to 10', and switched gases on the computers. Signaled the other guy left in the water towing the float that I had an issue with the O2, but was going to finish deco rather than heading straight up. I had 3 minutes of 100% deco remaining when I spat the O2 reg, and my computers wanted another 5-6 long minutes on EAN23 before clearing me to head up. I was a bit confused by the fact that the strange tingling/pins & needles pain remained, localized on the left side of my face, despite the fact that I was sitting more or less motionless at a pO2 of 0.3.
After surfacing in what appeared to be a canoe race going on around our dive flag, I headed over to the boat and hauled myself back aboard. Once I got myself settled in, I realized my face still felt the same. Then it clicked: the little floaty critters I'd seen an unusual number of on the dive had been trailing tentacles, and I'd surely taken what amounted to a mini-jellyfish to the face. Huge relief can apparently come in the form of having the crap stung out of your face
That also made a lot more sense than having a CNS hit after a relatively limited pO2 exposure.
My only real concern is that I opted to wait and see what happened after I got off the O2, rather than blow off a couple minutes of deco when I run a very conservative profile anyway. Based on what I know about CNS hits, I figured that going off the O2 and lowering my pO2 more by ascending should have been enough. Perhaps the wiser course would have still been to blow off the deco and get floating on the surface in case a seizure hit.
Dive was uneventful, dropped to the ledge rapidly and spent most of my 25 minutes of bottom time around 190' with a couple excursions to 200-205' to snag a giant spiny lobster/nearly lose my Scout light/look for sunrise shells. No signs of anything amiss at the bottom despite the fact I would have preferred straight air for a dive of this depth.
Ascended with the rest of the group to our first stop around 100', and moved from there at a pace about one stop behind the rest of the group (had a new backup Petrel on 20/75 that seemed to want more time than anyone else's plan, and I chose to humor it). Very clear water until 50' or so, with one big eagle ray and a bunch of drifty little translucent creatures in the water. Switched to 50% at 70' and ascent continued uneventfully; no current or swells to speak of, held all stops within a foot or so without much effort. Did lazy circles around the group on the drift float to amuse/warm myself.
Pulled up to the 20' stop, dialed in the buoyancy carefully in preparation of having a deco ceiling and a MOD floor that were very close together, and switched to the 100%. Was on the 100% for around 17 minutes without much incident other than a random swell drifting me to 23' for a second, with most of the time spent between 20' and 15', when I suddenly felt a stabbing, prickly pins & needles pain across the left side of my face.
Oh

After surfacing in what appeared to be a canoe race going on around our dive flag, I headed over to the boat and hauled myself back aboard. Once I got myself settled in, I realized my face still felt the same. Then it clicked: the little floaty critters I'd seen an unusual number of on the dive had been trailing tentacles, and I'd surely taken what amounted to a mini-jellyfish to the face. Huge relief can apparently come in the form of having the crap stung out of your face

My only real concern is that I opted to wait and see what happened after I got off the O2, rather than blow off a couple minutes of deco when I run a very conservative profile anyway. Based on what I know about CNS hits, I figured that going off the O2 and lowering my pO2 more by ascending should have been enough. Perhaps the wiser course would have still been to blow off the deco and get floating on the surface in case a seizure hit.