I recently returned from a liveaboard.
On about my 8th dive, I felt dizzy and with some ear pressure on ascent. I had had no issues descending and was not on any sort of decongestants. I descended a bit and ascended super-slowly, and it seemed OK.
However, I continued having some problems, always on ascent, and never for more than a little bit of the ascent. Maybe 2 more times where I felt dizzy but ear pressure on about half of the remaining dives I did. I usually descended and kept trying until my ears felt OK, but at least twice I felt the pressure get worse and then suddenly "pop" and then it was fine. By the end of the trip I had (self-diagnosed) middle ear barotrauma and doctor-diagnosed swimmer's ear. Right now I'm taking decongestants for the bulge in the eardrum my doctor saw and drops for the swimmer's ear.
So 3 questions: how do I end up with reverse block without decongestants or problems equalizing on descent? Does the dizziness suggest inner ear involvement? Does anyone know an ENT in the Baltimore/Washington area who is diving aware, and does going to one make sense in my situation?
On about my 8th dive, I felt dizzy and with some ear pressure on ascent. I had had no issues descending and was not on any sort of decongestants. I descended a bit and ascended super-slowly, and it seemed OK.
However, I continued having some problems, always on ascent, and never for more than a little bit of the ascent. Maybe 2 more times where I felt dizzy but ear pressure on about half of the remaining dives I did. I usually descended and kept trying until my ears felt OK, but at least twice I felt the pressure get worse and then suddenly "pop" and then it was fine. By the end of the trip I had (self-diagnosed) middle ear barotrauma and doctor-diagnosed swimmer's ear. Right now I'm taking decongestants for the bulge in the eardrum my doctor saw and drops for the swimmer's ear.
So 3 questions: how do I end up with reverse block without decongestants or problems equalizing on descent? Does the dizziness suggest inner ear involvement? Does anyone know an ENT in the Baltimore/Washington area who is diving aware, and does going to one make sense in my situation?