itziar
Contributor
I am a healthy and fit 37 year old female diver, with 35 dives in
the last 1.3 years since I took my OW certification. I had never
experienced any problems underwater, until this last weekend, when
repeatedly during two consecutive dives at 90 and 40 ft, I retched a
couple of times underwater. I felt as if there was something
obstructing my throat, and I had to force myself to swallow the air and
secure the regulator in my mouth and keep on breathing. I did not
feel nausea, dizziness or
unconfortable in any other way during the dives.
My rented regulator, however, did
not feel confortable in my mouth: I felt it was too small,
and I thought my reaction could have been due to
the forced position of my mouth. During the previous day, I had
happily dived without any problems with a different regulator.
At night, talking to my husband,
and buddy, I found out that he too had that retching
reaction a couple of times underwater, during our deepest dive, but
not during his second dive. He thought it could have been due to his
constant change of body position (horizontal, vertical, inverted, on
the side) since we were visiting a wreck,
and passing through the arches of the deck. He also had a bad
headeache all afternoon after the dives. He is a 40 year old, fit
and healthy man, with hypertension which he controls with
prescription drugs. He has been told by his doctor that the drugs will not
interfere with his diving.
We are a bit perplexed by this coincidence in our sensations
underwater, and do not know what to attribute it to. Could it be
that we were breathing bad air? A friend diving with us that
day did not notice anything unusual, however. I was also pondering
whether it could be CO2 toxicity, since we both are trying to
work on our breathing efficiency and we were using regulators we
were not confortable with (mine too small, his too hard to breath
from), and different from the ones we used
during our uneventful dives the previous day.
Could it be altitude related? We
live at 2200m, and dived at sea-level (not in a high-altitude lake).
I would greatly appreciate any input as to what the retching could
have been due to. Thanks for reading my long post!
the last 1.3 years since I took my OW certification. I had never
experienced any problems underwater, until this last weekend, when
repeatedly during two consecutive dives at 90 and 40 ft, I retched a
couple of times underwater. I felt as if there was something
obstructing my throat, and I had to force myself to swallow the air and
secure the regulator in my mouth and keep on breathing. I did not
feel nausea, dizziness or
unconfortable in any other way during the dives.
My rented regulator, however, did
not feel confortable in my mouth: I felt it was too small,
and I thought my reaction could have been due to
the forced position of my mouth. During the previous day, I had
happily dived without any problems with a different regulator.
At night, talking to my husband,
and buddy, I found out that he too had that retching
reaction a couple of times underwater, during our deepest dive, but
not during his second dive. He thought it could have been due to his
constant change of body position (horizontal, vertical, inverted, on
the side) since we were visiting a wreck,
and passing through the arches of the deck. He also had a bad
headeache all afternoon after the dives. He is a 40 year old, fit
and healthy man, with hypertension which he controls with
prescription drugs. He has been told by his doctor that the drugs will not
interfere with his diving.
We are a bit perplexed by this coincidence in our sensations
underwater, and do not know what to attribute it to. Could it be
that we were breathing bad air? A friend diving with us that
day did not notice anything unusual, however. I was also pondering
whether it could be CO2 toxicity, since we both are trying to
work on our breathing efficiency and we were using regulators we
were not confortable with (mine too small, his too hard to breath
from), and different from the ones we used
during our uneventful dives the previous day.
Could it be altitude related? We
live at 2200m, and dived at sea-level (not in a high-altitude lake).
I would greatly appreciate any input as to what the retching could
have been due to. Thanks for reading my long post!