Bopper
Contributor
Me: 41yo male, reasonably fit (I go on 25 mile bike rides over hills regularly), 5’9”, 195lbs. I was certified in Jul ’10 and dove wet up until Oct of last year where I started diving dry. I have noticed a slight decrease in fatigue but am still quite ‘sleepy’ after a series of dives (2 or more). No known health issues.
I – like so many other divers – often feel extremely fatigued after a day of diving. Sometimes it occurs the day of the diving, but more often the fatigue will more reliably exhibit itself the day after diving. I’ve always attributed this fatigue to one or several factors: the cold water in Southern California, dehydration, and the effects of nitrogen loading and gas exchanges in the blood.
It’s this last item that I have questions about. Recently while reading the book Deco for Divers, there was a blurb in it about ‘silent bubbles’, or bubbles that are present as a result of supersaturation which inevitably occurs after a dive. They are present but do not cause recognizable symptoms of DCS. However, the book indicated that these silent bubbles may cause a diver to feel fatigued.
So I started dwelling on this idea as a possible cause of my fatigue. I’ve come up with a bunch of questions regarding this subject, and I hope someone can help answer some of them:
I know it’s a lot of questions but I think you get the picture of what I’m getting at: I’m trying to deduce if I can pin my post-dive fatigue on silent bubbles and determine if I am affected differently than the general population. Any hints or advice as to how I might do that would be appreciated.
Thank you!
I – like so many other divers – often feel extremely fatigued after a day of diving. Sometimes it occurs the day of the diving, but more often the fatigue will more reliably exhibit itself the day after diving. I’ve always attributed this fatigue to one or several factors: the cold water in Southern California, dehydration, and the effects of nitrogen loading and gas exchanges in the blood.
It’s this last item that I have questions about. Recently while reading the book Deco for Divers, there was a blurb in it about ‘silent bubbles’, or bubbles that are present as a result of supersaturation which inevitably occurs after a dive. They are present but do not cause recognizable symptoms of DCS. However, the book indicated that these silent bubbles may cause a diver to feel fatigued.
So I started dwelling on this idea as a possible cause of my fatigue. I’ve come up with a bunch of questions regarding this subject, and I hope someone can help answer some of them:
- Would an expert conclude that for any diver that has done a significant amount of diving on a single day that the fatigue they end up feeling can be significantly attributed to silent bubbles?
- If silent bubbles do in fact cause fatigue, what is the exact mechanism that causes it?
- If the cause is that they inhibit gas exchange between the capillaries and the alveoli, is it specifically the lack of ‘inbound’ Oxygen or is it the retention of ‘outbound’ Carbon Dioxide, or both?
- Would the presence of silent bubbles register as a decrease in oxygen saturation levels?
- If I purchased a fingertip oximeter and sampled my oxygen level prior to my dive, and then sampled my oxygen after my dive, could a difference in these values be an indication of the effects of silent bubbles on my system?
- If I sampled several dive buddies before a dive and then after the dive, and I consistently showed a higher percentage decrease in oxygen saturation than my dive buddies after a dive, would this be an indication that I am more prone to silent bubbles? An indication that I might have a PFO and they do not?
I know it’s a lot of questions but I think you get the picture of what I’m getting at: I’m trying to deduce if I can pin my post-dive fatigue on silent bubbles and determine if I am affected differently than the general population. Any hints or advice as to how I might do that would be appreciated.

Thank you!