DevonDiver
N/A
hyperventilating by definition creates low levels of CO2.
Hyperventilating is typically associated with rapid breathing.
Whilst not definitively correct, the rapid, but shallow, breathing associated with diver stress is often misnamed 'hyperventilation'.
To avoid confusion, lets call rapid/shallow breathing 'respiratory stress', rather than hyperventilation.
Elevation In lung CO2 is (I believe?) the trigger for respiratory demand. The body/brain does not recognize O2 depletion whatsoever as a physiological demand.
CO2 elevation signals a need to respire more urgently. If that increased respiration doesn't lower CO2, then the urgency maintains... or raises. In scuba diving, there are factors that can impede more rapid breathing from lowering CO2.
Freedivers 'hyperventilate' before submerging....to lower CO2.
Panicked scuba divers suffer from 'respiratory stress.... raising CO2.
Applied to scuba diving, there's the issue of extended dead air spaces. To some extent, the diver can 'rebreathe' expired gas; causing hypercapnia (aka CO2 retention).
Deeper breathing can overcome dead air spaces, but if the respiratory demand sensation has stressed the diver, then their breathing may have become shallower.
This will be further exasperated by increased gas density impeding respiratory efficiency AND the elevation of inspired gas partial pressures (in this case, ppCO2) on descent/at pressure causing more stress response.
The purely medical definitions don't always neatly apply to HYPERBARIC circumstances.
Hypercapnia is a significant issue for divers. CO2 increases respiratory stress AND is a highly narcotic gas.
CO2 seems to present as a form of narcosis often termed 'dark narc'. It's associated with feelings of anxiety and panic. It often presents after a rapid descent (rapid dissolved ppCO2 rise) where the diver isn't respiring efficiently and/or subject to exertion.
Coupled with respiratory stress from dead air spaces and increased breathing gas density, this can lead even the most psychologically robust diver into anxiety and stress. For the novice diver, it hits like an invisible sledge hammer.... and an instinctive panic response is more than likely.
Last edited: