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#1
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Tribe,
Recently I have had a heck of a time diving. My symptoms ocurred as follows. During a static apnea pool training session, I experienced my back muscles contracting starting just below my neck line and running up into my rear skull, at around 235. Since I just started training this is at the edge of my max time right now. The pain was unbearable and caused me to discontinue training. The next day I went out and was diving on the line. I did two warm up drops 5 meters for around a minute and then 10 meters for 120. The neck grabbed a little and the headache was stronger than the day before. I actually could not function as a safety diver the pain was so extreme. The following day I was doing a full exhalation to reverse packing and diving to twelve feet. The headache came back in short order, in fact the first drop. I am experiencing the same symptoms, somewhat milder during simple surface static holds. I am not pushing it hoping that I can heal and then check it out once more. I am worried the symptoms may signal some other more serious condition. Or worse that this may limit my diving for some time.It has been about six days now. The headache is mild now and more forward over the temple. The headache experienced during the work outs was in the rear region primarily, but not limited. It was intense pain. I am wondering if anyone has experienced a similar situation. Please help. I am also interested in an apnea specialist in my region, I am living in Guam and near Japan, Taiwan, Philipines, Hong Kong, Bangkok, I appreciate your advice. Troy Williams AKA Lonefin Guam |
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#2
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Troy,
It could be , that you have a very low tolerance towards CO2 buildup. A headache is a very good indicator that you have way to much CO2 in your system. Just bear in mind, that CO2 is alot more narcotic than Nitrogen and has higher anesthetic properties compared to Nitrogen. Maybe do a few sessions with an instructor to watch how you breathe? It could be that you breathing is wrong. Anyway, hope this helps and PLEASE dive safe and get well Ali
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Long live testosterone and free thinking men. |
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#3
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I am no Dr, but I find that if I have a headache after a dive, a good BURP helps and some O2 for a few mins
-Ali
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Long live testosterone and free thinking men. |
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#4
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Some discussions about headaches...
http://forums.deeperblue.net/general...-freedive.html http://forums.deeperblue.net/general...-headache.html I think it is probably a CO2 headache, or something to do with blood pressure. It is unlikely to be a sinus squeeze if it is happening on the surface. Definitely don't keep on doing the training that causes the headache. Lucia |
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#5
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Quote:
I hate Co2 headaches. They take days and days to go away. A
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Long live testosterone and free thinking men. |
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#6
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To me that doesn't seem like a co2 headache, although it is possible. But co2 headaches build up slowly and usually you have to do some serious apnea to get there (or very short recoverys).
I had a very similar experience recently. I made a free immersion dive to 30m without anything else on except speedos. The water got a little cold on the bottom and as I wasn't wearing any face equimpent, I lost consentration for a moment, had a cold contraction and pulled "something" in the back of my neck, resulting in a massive headache. I stopped diving for the day, the headache was gone and I was reliefed. But after that, the same thing started happening every now and then. On other days I would be ok, but on some days the headache was pounding. Upon returning home (I was on a one week trip) I got a really bad case from doing chinups. Basically all I could do was lay on a sofa for 4 hours (and I don't usually bitch about little wears and tears). So I decided to completely rest for a week, and after that I've been slowly re-introducing physical activities and seem to be completely ok now... I was really scared I had maybe ruptured a blood vessel or something, but just calm common sense said it cannot be. I would have other symptoms then than just a sudden, throbbing pain associated with physical effort. Also stretching my neck seemed to bring some relief, although I could never exactly pinpoint the problem area. But I'm pretty convinced it was a pulled/cramped muscle somewhere deep in my neck/skull or something like that caused from an uncontrollable contraction from the cold. So there's my experience from recent. I'm not saying that you should just ignore it - persistent head aches are usually a VERY good reason to visit a doctor (I'm lucky to have one at home
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Simo K |
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#7
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I am not sure about whether the increased blood pressure at the end of apnea, and caused by contractions, has any risks.
I am also not sure about the risks of high CO2 - I asked about this some time ago. http://forums.deeperblue.net/general...-high-co2.html |
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#8
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I will write a longer article about this tonight when I get home.
On a narcotic scale ( 0 being most anesthetic 5 being lowest) Co2 is a 0 The scale is as follows by Meyer-Overton hence Meyer Overton scale. 0=CO2 .45= O2 2= N2 5= Helium There are other gases in the middle too. The suprising one is that O2 is a bit more narcotic than nitrogen but since we are talking about CO2 headaches then I will stick to that. CO2 also has a higher lipid solubility factor as well being a very dense gas. I will write the rest tonight and post it up. ali
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Long live testosterone and free thinking men. |
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#9
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I am sorry Deepwater, but I am afraid you are not correct. CO2 is actually 130 times more narcotic than nitrogen. It's narcotic effects are just no serious issue in normal conditions, because there is just 4%-5% of CO2 in exhaled air vs 78% of nitrogen, and CO2 is about 25 times more soluble than N2. Besides it, CO2 retention promotes both nitrogen narcosis and oxygen toxicity - read more about if for example in the document listed here: narcosis @ APNEA.cz
Additionally, the toxic effect of CO2 is a much more important issue than its narcotic effect. |
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#10
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Quote:
I am very well aware that CO2 is 130x for narcotic than N2. I think you read the post wrong.Maybe you got confused with the word anasthetic. 0 on the scale means the MOST narcotic ,i:e highest anesthetic properties. Let me clarify. 0=CO2---------Most Narcotic .45= O2 2= N2 5= Helium------- Least Narcotic I can go into figures on lipid solubility factors as well as I know the figures. The above you say is correct and that was what I was trying to highlight. Sounds like you repeated what I wrote. A
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Long live testosterone and free thinking men. Last edited by Deepwater; July 2nd, 2007 at 19:59. |
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#11
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Sorry, indeed I did not see the inversed scale. But still, what I wrote stands: the toxic effect of CO2 will most likely be more important, especially at static and dynamic or shallow dives. As I wrote, the narcotic effect of CO2 is greatly suppressed by its low level and high solubility. Though it is sure at deep apnea dives it may get much more important than at scuba -1st because the CO2 level will be higher than at scuba, and 2nd also because the high CO2 stimulates also N2 narcosis and O2 toxicity, which NLT apnea divers (unlike tech divers) cannot fight with different gas mixtures, but maximally with emptying their lungs like Herbert did. Still some amount of air remains, and the gas is also dissolved in blood and tissue, so the effects are not completely eliminated by the empty lungs dive.
Last edited by trux; July 3rd, 2007 at 22:13. |
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#12
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Quote:
No worries, we all misread things. I misread the scale as well when I first saw it, when I did DIR-F. -Ali
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Long live testosterone and free thinking men. |
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#13
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Quote:
my neck would tense up and then a pain would shoot up into the back of my head and would basically render me useless for a few hours. i would even try to fall asleep after taking medicine(s) just to avoid the pain. i never got it checked out, because since then i have learned proper breathing techniques while working out and havent had the pain since. every so often i will feel a little tension on my neck again, but i stop what im doing and move onto another exercise before the pain begins. for your sake though, i would consider researching a little bit (apnea sites, webMD, google, etc) and if you cant figure it out and symptoms/problems persist, i would go talk to your doctor about it. im sure there is some type of solution so you dont have to stop diving all together. good luck! Last edited by aesthetic; July 4th, 2007 at 06:11. |