Yes, the urge to breath should be around the same with pure O2 or Nitrox as with normal air. Better told it should be even slightly higher, because of the Haldane effect that frees more CO2 from hemoglobin thanks to the higher PaO2, hence there is more CO2 (or HCO3 ions) increasing the respiratory acidosis. However, when breathing pure oxygen or enriched air, you rarely ventilate normally, so there is practically always some pre-dive hyperventilation reducing the initial CO2 level. And the increased Haldane effect (and the consequent CO2 release) due to the ventialtion with enriched air, is strongest during the breath-up, hence the hyperventilation is quicker than with air.
I am not sure whether the CO2 level in lungs increases significantly higher than at normal breath-hold. Very likely there is some difference (already due to the mentioned Haldane effect), but I do not think that the presence or non-presence of nitrogen plays any important role. It is more question of partial pressures of CO2 in alveoli, and in arterial blood, and those are not really influenced by the nitrogen. Well, in fact it is, but in the opposite way - without the N2, the partial pressure (not the volume) of CO2 in lungs would raise quicker with the consumption of O2 (the CO2 part becomes more important), so the diffusion from blood to the alveoli should become slightly slower. On the other hand, the PACO2 (arterial pressure) is also higher (due to the mentioned Haldane effect), so I am not sure what the final result really would be. I did not find any study specifically investigating levels of CO2 during O2 or Nitrox breath-holds, so all this is just a speculation.
Otherwise, high level of carbon dioxide is toxic to the heart and causes diminished contractile force, that's why it is difficult to revive someone under CO2 blackout. I am not sure what a normal person without advanced medical means can do. Artificial ventilating may help eliminating some excess CO2, but doing classical mouth-to-mouth may not be the best way for it. Probably better than nothing, though.
EDIT - Legal note: I am neither a physician, nor a diving expert, so do not use my opinions or advices for making your decisions if you are going to perform a CPR on someone under CO2 blackout, without verifying them with a real medicine expert!
I am not sure whether the CO2 level in lungs increases significantly higher than at normal breath-hold. Very likely there is some difference (already due to the mentioned Haldane effect), but I do not think that the presence or non-presence of nitrogen plays any important role. It is more question of partial pressures of CO2 in alveoli, and in arterial blood, and those are not really influenced by the nitrogen. Well, in fact it is, but in the opposite way - without the N2, the partial pressure (not the volume) of CO2 in lungs would raise quicker with the consumption of O2 (the CO2 part becomes more important), so the diffusion from blood to the alveoli should become slightly slower. On the other hand, the PACO2 (arterial pressure) is also higher (due to the mentioned Haldane effect), so I am not sure what the final result really would be. I did not find any study specifically investigating levels of CO2 during O2 or Nitrox breath-holds, so all this is just a speculation.
Otherwise, high level of carbon dioxide is toxic to the heart and causes diminished contractile force, that's why it is difficult to revive someone under CO2 blackout. I am not sure what a normal person without advanced medical means can do. Artificial ventilating may help eliminating some excess CO2, but doing classical mouth-to-mouth may not be the best way for it. Probably better than nothing, though.
EDIT - Legal note: I am neither a physician, nor a diving expert, so do not use my opinions or advices for making your decisions if you are going to perform a CPR on someone under CO2 blackout, without verifying them with a real medicine expert!
Last edited: