Wasn't sure if this was a physiology forum question or a basic scuba one, apologies if it's incorrect. But it seemed to be a "basic" kind of question newer divers might ask
After a recent trip, on the last couple of dives I got back on the boat with a pretty painful headache. The DM and other divers suggested it was reverse block, would pass with time and that painkillers/hot towels might help. Rest on the surface interval did help, and considering I'd felt absolutely fine on the first dive I followed the advice and did dive #2 with a headache, albeit not "raging".
As soon as I started descending it disappeared, immediately, and I felt wonderful. One of the best dives of the trip followed, set a new personal record for air consumption, no problems whatsoever. However, on the basis that it was reverse block, I decided to do a longer, slower ascent. Very slowly approached the boat from 60ft and I stopped for 3 mins at 20 ft, 3 @ 15ft and had intended to do 3 more at 10ft but as soon as I hit 15ft/10ft the pain started again and I just wanted out of the water. Struggled through my 3mins @ 15ft then just slowly ascended and got out as promptly as I could. We hadn't gone deep, I kept within 60' and I'd done a slow, controlled ascent and 6 mins of safety stops. But I came out and again had a splitting headache.
2 or 3 hours later, after ibuprofen and a short nap the pain had disappeared completely. Back to normal.
Now, earlier that morning, a few hours before diving, I had a crick in my neck from the hotel pillows - seriously, who needs FOUR pillows - so took a painkiller. Nothing major, pain dissipated, felt absolutely fine before diving. Turns out it was an Advil decongestant AND painkiller though. So even though I had no sinus problems, no cold/lingering cold, no trouble equalising on ascent/descent, I assumed having had the advil earlier meant the reverse block kicked in when it wore off somehow. Seemed like a long time for advil to linger in my system, but I heeded the advice of those with more experience. I thought the fact I'd done a longer, slower ascent might even rule out reverse block?
However...
Back home (still fine, no problems) and describing the incident to a diver friend he says that after any extended dive sessions on air, he ALWAYS gets sinus headaches, without fail. Not reverse block, just a headache, and he claims nitrox has solved that issue for him entirely. Stats for the last two dives were 54 mins at 60' max and 73 mins at 61' max so I was under a fair old time. Definitely the first time I've had headaches after diving and two of the longest back to back dives ever. Is this a common occurrence for others?
Any advice or tips to avoid it appreciated!
(also, just to stress, I understand the risks associated with diving under the influence of drugs/painkillers etc. I'm not sure if in this case it's even linked to my headache, just wanted to give all the facts for the day rather than leave out anything important)
---------- Post Merged at 04:45 PM ---------- Previous Post was at 04:37 PM ----------
actually, once I'd posted this it showed me some similar threads - none posted more recently than 2005 apparently - but it suggests dehydration and CO2 buildup are common causes?
Dehydration - I'm usually very anal about staying hydrated and although I pee quite a lot while diving (it's my personal test to make sure I'm properly relaxed and helps breathing, is that weird?? ) I didn't feel too bad, drank on the surface interval etc.
CO2 buildup is something I'm going to look into now.
After a recent trip, on the last couple of dives I got back on the boat with a pretty painful headache. The DM and other divers suggested it was reverse block, would pass with time and that painkillers/hot towels might help. Rest on the surface interval did help, and considering I'd felt absolutely fine on the first dive I followed the advice and did dive #2 with a headache, albeit not "raging".
As soon as I started descending it disappeared, immediately, and I felt wonderful. One of the best dives of the trip followed, set a new personal record for air consumption, no problems whatsoever. However, on the basis that it was reverse block, I decided to do a longer, slower ascent. Very slowly approached the boat from 60ft and I stopped for 3 mins at 20 ft, 3 @ 15ft and had intended to do 3 more at 10ft but as soon as I hit 15ft/10ft the pain started again and I just wanted out of the water. Struggled through my 3mins @ 15ft then just slowly ascended and got out as promptly as I could. We hadn't gone deep, I kept within 60' and I'd done a slow, controlled ascent and 6 mins of safety stops. But I came out and again had a splitting headache.
2 or 3 hours later, after ibuprofen and a short nap the pain had disappeared completely. Back to normal.
Now, earlier that morning, a few hours before diving, I had a crick in my neck from the hotel pillows - seriously, who needs FOUR pillows - so took a painkiller. Nothing major, pain dissipated, felt absolutely fine before diving. Turns out it was an Advil decongestant AND painkiller though. So even though I had no sinus problems, no cold/lingering cold, no trouble equalising on ascent/descent, I assumed having had the advil earlier meant the reverse block kicked in when it wore off somehow. Seemed like a long time for advil to linger in my system, but I heeded the advice of those with more experience. I thought the fact I'd done a longer, slower ascent might even rule out reverse block?
However...
Back home (still fine, no problems) and describing the incident to a diver friend he says that after any extended dive sessions on air, he ALWAYS gets sinus headaches, without fail. Not reverse block, just a headache, and he claims nitrox has solved that issue for him entirely. Stats for the last two dives were 54 mins at 60' max and 73 mins at 61' max so I was under a fair old time. Definitely the first time I've had headaches after diving and two of the longest back to back dives ever. Is this a common occurrence for others?
Any advice or tips to avoid it appreciated!
(also, just to stress, I understand the risks associated with diving under the influence of drugs/painkillers etc. I'm not sure if in this case it's even linked to my headache, just wanted to give all the facts for the day rather than leave out anything important)
---------- Post Merged at 04:45 PM ---------- Previous Post was at 04:37 PM ----------
actually, once I'd posted this it showed me some similar threads - none posted more recently than 2005 apparently - but it suggests dehydration and CO2 buildup are common causes?
Dehydration - I'm usually very anal about staying hydrated and although I pee quite a lot while diving (it's my personal test to make sure I'm properly relaxed and helps breathing, is that weird?? ) I didn't feel too bad, drank on the surface interval etc.
CO2 buildup is something I'm going to look into now.