GLENFWB
Contributor
This exact thing happened to me while diving in the Galapagos Islands two years ago. If you are not familiar with Galapagos diving, generally you are diving in a group and we had 8 in our group. Basically everyone is diving the same profile. My computer never went in to deco, safety stops were always observed, and out of 8 in our group, and 16 total on the boat I am the only one who took a hit. After 3 chamber rides and my return trip to the states, I evaluated my dives with several tech instructor friends. We came to some conclusions about possible/probable causes. I have adjusted my diving since that time to be ultra conservative in my profiles. Obviously other people can get away with more aggressive profiles then my body will allow.
1. No dive table or decompression algorithm is 100% safe.
2. Even within recreational limits, the tables and algorithms are not iso-risk. In other words, the deeper the dive and the longer the bottom time, the higher the probability of DCS.
It's not unusual for one member of a group that follows the same dive profile to get DCS while the others don't. We see it all the time. And I suspect that if you actually counted the countless thousands and analyzed all the cases of decompression sickness among dive groups who perform the same dives as the OP did, you'd come up with a significantly higher rate of DCS than the baseline for Carribbean PDE divers.
Best regards,
DDM
Best regards,
DDM