nitrox downsides

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I used to dismiss claims that Nitrox would be less fatigueing to the diver. Then I got old. And then I developed some sort of afib that may eventually require a probe going in and desensitizing some nerves and which cannot be treated in the normal means of suppressing my heart rate with na drug due to a life long fitness regimen that leaves me with a 40 BPM or less pulse. So, now after exhaustive (pun) testing I have come to believe that Nitrox may well reduce fatigue and at least when I am wanting to hyperventilate due to inadequate blood circulation during an afib event triggered by chasing a turtle/shark/UFO etc, well, I just feel all warm and fuzzy all over about it. People go to O2 bars to breath cherry flavored O2 and then go vape with Nicotine and other carcinogens and undo what good might have been done, I guess it makes sense that a mix higher than ambient O2 might be less fatiguing, maybe. Unless Nitrox is all that is available I am probably not going to waste it tooling around in 15 feet of water shooting macro subjects. If it is cherry flavored though I am a go. Dinosaurs and giant dragon flies breathed Nitrox. Do not tell the climate folks that the oxygen content of the atmosphere has also changed, they could ban Nitrox as a pollutant. It was after all once called Voodoo Gas :stirpot:. I have not been able to get any Cretaceous opinions on the matter.
 
If she wants to keep diving nitrox, I would explore the pO2 level where her discomfort begins. Once established, it should be simple enough to tailor the mix and/or the depth with that limit in mind.

You'd think. I suggested as much in an earlier post. Slowly increase the percentages of 02 until the trigger point is reached (without her actually knowing the blend to rule out subjective effects), and I was accused of treating the poor lady like a monkey.

The certified Trimix/nitrox/CCR instructor in question would rather just keep feeding her nitrox and having her deal with the symptoms.

Go figure.
 
That explains why it's all theoretical to you.

This isn't about me and what gas I breathe underwater.

In all of your rather detailed posts with provided references there was nothing about measurable objective positive effects in recreational divers breathing trimix vs nitrox in depths of 100-130'.
 
In all of your rather detailed posts with provided references there was nothing about measurable objective positive effects in recreational divers breathing trimix vs nitrox in depths of 100-130'.
cool. Go do some trimix dives in the rec range and keep your END above 100ft and report back.
 
I accept this and have posted as much. That much said, I've never ever heard of pulmonary toxicity symptoms due to breathing recreational nitrox blends nor can I find a single other reference to it here on this forum nor anywhere else online.

Furthermore, I've suggested 2 effective ways of further diagnosing and dealing with it which were immediately rebuked by a trimix/nitrox instructor who is perfectly ok with this woman continuing to dive nitrox despite the serious symptoms

You'd think. I suggested as much in an earlier post. Slowly increase the percentages of 02 until the trigger point is reached (without her actually knowing the blend to rule out subjective effects), and I was accused of treating the poor lady like a monkey.
The certified Trimix/nitrox/CCR instructor in question would rather just keep feeding her nitrox and having her deal with the symptoms.
Go figure.

You keep writing crap.
I'm not a scientist.
I'm not a doctor.

We detected this problem and sent her to see a specialist.

This diver received permission to dive from this doctor following medical examinations carried out with recommendations from this specialist.

She doesn't necessarily dive with us and we're not going to keep her on a leash.
She is free to do what she wants, where she wants, following her doctor's advice.

You, who know nothing about the medical file and not much about diving, dare to judge a doctor's opinion?

Keep spouting nonsense, you're a diving god, you understand everything and know better than everyone else about diving, and keep giving your ****** advice.
 
You keep writing crap.
I'm not a scientist.
I'm not a doctor.

We detected this problem and sent her to see a specialist.

This diver received permission to dive from this doctor following medical examinations carried out with recommendations from this specialist.

She doesn't necessarily dive with us and we're not going to keep her on a leash.
She is free to do what she wants, where she wants, following her doctor's advice.

You, who know nothing about the medical file and not much about diving, dare to judge a doctor's opinion?

Keep spouting nonsense, you're a diving god, you understand everything and know better than everyone else about diving, and keep giving your ****** advice.
Yeah, just keep supplying the woman with nitrox and watch her cough up mucous after each dive, and don't make any suggestions to alleviate what lets face it, is someone else's problem because you aren't a scientist or a doctor.

Leave it to her doctors who apparently haven't made any recommendations such as determining what percentage of nitrox triggers her symptoms and just keep right on diving the same blends and getting inflammed lungs and potentially permanent lung damage.

How do you sleep at night?
 
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