meisburger
Guest
In my seven years of diving I have occasionally had some difficulty clearing my ears, but not much since I quit diving with people in a hurry to get down. Now I take my time and clear often and dont decend until my ears clear,which sometimes takes a few minutes.
Anyway, thats not my problem. Beginning about six months ago, I have several times experienced an incredibly painful sinus squeeze as I decend. The first time I eventually got down, clearing my sinus with blood I guess, which flowed relatively freely on ascent. For the rest of that trip moderate pressure would re-open the wound, and on surfacing I would get a little blood in my mask. Since then I have been more patient, and on my last dive (last weekend) hung around at 3.5 meters for about six minutes waitin gfor my sinus to equalize. I eventually got down, but again experienced some discomfort from reverse squeeze while ascending. On later dives that day my sinus cleared a bit easier, and I took my time coming up as well as going down.
For the relatively shallow reef diving I am doing this is not an insurmountable problem, but obviously something is wrong. I had problems breathing though my nose due to allergies and visited a doctor last spring who started me on a nasal spray shortly before this problem began, so I suspect it may be part of the problem. I also seem to have pretty much lost my sense of smell. Anyway, I am going to the US for the holidays and thought I would visit a docter to try to figure this out. My question is should I just find an ENT, or is there such a thing as a sinus specialist? Should I tyr to find one specializing in diving, and would that even be possible in a place like Tucson.
I would appreciate any advice. Tim
Anyway, thats not my problem. Beginning about six months ago, I have several times experienced an incredibly painful sinus squeeze as I decend. The first time I eventually got down, clearing my sinus with blood I guess, which flowed relatively freely on ascent. For the rest of that trip moderate pressure would re-open the wound, and on surfacing I would get a little blood in my mask. Since then I have been more patient, and on my last dive (last weekend) hung around at 3.5 meters for about six minutes waitin gfor my sinus to equalize. I eventually got down, but again experienced some discomfort from reverse squeeze while ascending. On later dives that day my sinus cleared a bit easier, and I took my time coming up as well as going down.
For the relatively shallow reef diving I am doing this is not an insurmountable problem, but obviously something is wrong. I had problems breathing though my nose due to allergies and visited a doctor last spring who started me on a nasal spray shortly before this problem began, so I suspect it may be part of the problem. I also seem to have pretty much lost my sense of smell. Anyway, I am going to the US for the holidays and thought I would visit a docter to try to figure this out. My question is should I just find an ENT, or is there such a thing as a sinus specialist? Should I tyr to find one specializing in diving, and would that even be possible in a place like Tucson.
I would appreciate any advice. Tim