melfox26:
I've tried the ginger pills, didn't work too well. I switched over to Meclizine, brand name Bonine or Dramamine 2. They are available OTC without prescription, and they work wonders to stop me from getting seasick.
I used to get headaches occasionally after diving, that went away after I started using Nitrox. However, during my recent trip to Cozumel, I dove on air the entire time and felt prefectly fine. Who knows.
Mel
PADI Rescue Diver/Nitrox
Mel,
Let me guess: you used to get headaches when you were relatively new to diving? Then when you had gained experience, you took a nitrox-cert and the headaches disappeared? My guess is, that it has nothing to do with Nitrox, and here is why....
It's not that uncommon among new divers to be tense. Holding a regulator between your teeth is unnatural for most people. Doing so under water where dropping it means that breathing becomes oh so much harder is even more unnatural. For that reason, I see a tendancy among some beginning divers to "bite unnaturally" and tense their jaw-muscles and other facial/neck muscles, trying to hold it in place. Not really biting, but "blocking the jaw without biting", rather than just relaxing, knowing that the reg will stay in place and that if not, they can easilly recover it. Anyways, the point to this is that I notice that these are the same divers who almost always complain over headaches when back on the boat. Once they learn to relax and "be zen", they reg just sits naturally in a relaxed mouth, and the headaches are gone. This might have been what has happened to you?
I am sure that one of the M.D. or DSS's on this board has a much more accurate explanation of the physiology of this than I, but the above is just what I've observed.
I know from myself that when I get tired, I often end up tensing my jaw-muscles and shortly thereafter get a splitting headache. This can happen when just sitting in my sofa watching telly. If I catch it in time, I can relax and avoid the headache. If not, then only a painkiller and sleep will fix me.
As for nausea or sea-sickness, I do not know anything about this. Nausea after surfacing from a dive can't be a good sign, though, so I would refer any such things to a medical professional.