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Diving and nose ble...
 

[Closed] Diving and nose bleeds

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[#7939334]

Hi All,

We are about to go to Spain on holiday and my some wants to do his advanced diving course having completed PADI open water last year.

However, he has been having a number of nose bleeds recently which we are putting down to hay fever.

Is there any reason to be worried apart from attracting sharks?!

dOGSBY


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 6:54 am
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Nope. He might surface with a bloody mask.

Worth checking on medical requirements for spain though, ive got a nagging suspicion they ask for one.


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 7:57 am
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Is your son aged about 16? I had a lot of nosebleeds at that age and my son has also gone through a spell of lots of nosebleeds; he's 17 now and it seems to have stopped.


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 8:02 am
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I guess from a medical perspective it may be worth getting this checked out. From the diving side, simply having a nose bleed isn't a massive issue and the there will be blood present after surfacing. Of more concern is if the blood is originating from his sinuses. If the lad gets a blockage in one of the passages that drains any of his sinus cavities he'll find he can't equalise on the way down. More worrying would be is he gets a bung up whilst at depth. Reversed sinuses are excruciatingly painful and can halt the ascent back to the surface.

D.


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 8:41 am
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Many thanks for the advice. The boy is much happier as it looks like he can dive (we are getting a medical in Spain) and I am happier to let him go!


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 12:28 pm
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I used to get a lot of nosebleeds from hayfever. Does he also get congestion? A blocked nose/sinuses will make equalising pressure when diving difficult or impossible (eg when you have a cold).

I can't remember whether my nose streamed or got blocked with hayfever!


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 3:49 pm
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May make him more susceptible to picking up a sinus infection which can be extremely difficult to treat (sinuses are infection-friendly warm, moist cavities with poor air circulation and comparatively poor blood supply).


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 4:48 pm
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of course there's also a good chance that whatever pollen he has an alergy to won't be present in that part of Spain so within a couple of days he could be suffering less anyway.


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 5:12 pm
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Probably fine* - these guys give free advice** if it's not covered on this page.

http://www.londondivingchamber.co.uk/index.php?id=advice

* don't take the word of some random on the internet about it...

**it's possible that advice will be "see a doctor".


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 5:48 pm
 iolo
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I'm not a diver, but am nearly sure there's no pollen underwater or in the oxygen provided in the tank.
Why would he get a nosebleed whilst diving if they are pollen related?


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 5:56 pm
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I'm not a diver, but am nearly sure there's no pollen underwater or in the [s]oxygen [/s] air provided in the tank.
Why would he get a nosebleed whilst diving if they are pollen related?

It depends on how good the dive centre pollen filters are.

If you've got hayfever when you start a dive, it's probably not going to go away by the end of it.

That said, it isn't a total no-no to dive with hayfever.*

* don't take the word of some random on the internet about it...


 
Posted : 12/07/2016 6:08 pm
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I'm not a diver, but am nearly sure there's no pollen underwater or in the oxygen provided in the tank.
Why would he get a nosebleed whilst diving if they are pollen related?

The nosebleeds don't come directly from the hayfever. The hayfever irritates your nose linings, you sniff, sneeze, blow your nose etc etc a lot. You get nosebleeds. At least that's how it used to be for me.


 
Posted : 13/07/2016 11:29 am