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Don,
Clearly you are, the best judge of your own limitations ... so permit me to help you out:
During descent:
Clearly you are, the best judge of your own limitations ... so permit me to help you out:
During descent:
- Lung volume decreases due to chest compression, resulting in increased lung total pressure, and of course increased PO2, PCO2 and PN2.
- In the lung, after hyperventilation, there is a reduced PCO2. E. g., if lung volume is reduced to one-half by descent to 33 feet, lung PO2 is doubled, lung PCO2 increases initially, but is followed by lowered PCO2 due to the reversed gradient.
- The blood reacts by developing a respiratory alkalosis (more CO2).
- Carotid body chemoreceptors cause a slow-down of the heart and permit longer breath holding.
- Despite rapid O2 usage, the arterial PCO2 drops and a strong desire to breathe is not stimulated until sufficient oxyen is used up that the PCO2 rises sufficiently.
- While at depth, increased lung PO2 (due to increased ambient pressure) provides a favorable gradient for O2 transfer from the lung to blood, occurring more rapidly than if the diver were on the surface.
- Alveolar PCO2 increases with compression, CO2 does not leave the blood to enter the lung and arterial CO2 rises rapidly (especially with exercise) initially, then the tissues store CO2.
- As the lung re-expands, the PCO2 becomes elevated as more diffuses into the lung, but due to the drop in ambient pressure there is a concomitant dramatic drop in the PO2.
- In the blood the PCO2 goes up with the depth of the dive and the amount of exercise. Deep dives drive more CO2 from the lungs into the tissues and increases the problem.
- When the need to breathe point is reached , the chemoreceptors are stimulated by CO2, and there is a strong dsesire to take a breath. Low O2 also can cause this.
- In the brain: CO2 goes up and makes you want to breathe; Vasodilation increases O2 consumption;PO2 drops with the drop in ambient pressure and if PO2 drops enough, unconsciousness occurs.
- On ascent the lungs re-expand; this decreases the diffusion gradient for oxygen. Shallower depths can cause this gradient to approach zero, and the diver goes out like a light due to extreme hypoxia, possibly before the diver reaches the surface.