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	<title>Hurghada Divers &#187; safety</title>
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		<title>Smoking and scuba diving</title>
		<link>http://www.hurghadadivers.com/diving/spots/in/hurghada/red/sea/sharm/egypt/smoking-and-scuba-diving/</link>
		<comments>http://www.hurghadadivers.com/diving/spots/in/hurghada/red/sea/sharm/egypt/smoking-and-scuba-diving/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Mar 2010 06:18:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Hurghada Divers</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles and Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[safety]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[smoking]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hurghadadivers.com/?p=31</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If you dive, don't smoke and if you smoke don't dive. There are many reasons why it is foolish to do both.]]></description>
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<li>Oxygen is  distributed around your body by red blood corpuscles. These are the  shape of a Pontefract cake. They are too big to fit down the finest  capillaries so fold over to do so. Unfortunately the carbon monoxide in  cigarette smoke bonds to a red corpuscle 200 to 300 times more readily  than oxygen does. A red corpuscle contaminated with carbon monoxide  becomes stiff and won’t fold over to fit down the finest capillaries.  This effect is exacerbated by the fact that nicotine is a vaso  constrictor, making those capillaries even finer. The lack of oxygen  supply can clearly be seen in the blue blotches that appear on a  smoker’s skin after a dive. If it is doing this to the skin just imagine  what it is doing to the other organs. Remember that the half-life of  carbon monoxide in your blood is four to six hours so you should allow  anything from 12 to 18 hours between smoking and diving. Just try  telling that to your average nicotine junkie!</li>
<li>Most smokers have  a degree of obstructive pulmonary disease caused by their habit, which  often manifests itself in the coughing that bronchitis causes. The lungs  have a mechanism to keep themselves clean and clear; there are huge  quantities of cilia lining the air passages. These are small and  hair-like and beat to transport the rubbish up and out of your lungs.  Whenever you smoke they stop for around an hour so there is no more  cleaning action. In a heavy smoker cilia are absent altogether. This  means that all the rubbish stays in your lungs, where it adds to the  obstructive pulmonary disease and causes areas of the lung to be cut off  and to stop working. As you surface at the end of a dive the air in  these areas must escape past obstructions such as mucous plugs; if it  can’t then you will have a lung expansion injury. This is why the level  of these injuries is so much higher in smokers than non-smokers.</li>
<li>The  increased blood carbon dioxide (CO2) retention and reduced lung  function in smokers has been implicated in a higher susceptibility to CNS  oxygen toxicity.</li>
<li>The vasoconstrictor effect of nicotine changes  the blood perfusion in the body, making DCS more likely. Loss of lung  function reduces nitrogen washout on ascent, also making DCS more  likely. What has also been observed in chambers worldwide is that DCS  hits on smokers are much worse than DCS hits on non-smokers.</li>
<li>Smokers  are hypoxic because of CO2 retention. This makes deep water blackout  far more likely.</li>
<li>The carbon monoxide in a smoker’s blood has an  effect on mental capabilities and skills, impairing judgment. With  depth the PP will go up, making this worse. When added to nitrogen  narcosis it becomes clear that a diving smoker is likely to have severe judgment problems.</li>
<li>Up to fifteen percent of a smoker’s blood  oxygen is replaced by carbon monoxide. When added to the typical loss of  lung function and narrowing of the arteries in a smoker this  significantly reduces the ability of the body to take on oxygen, so if  called on to do extra work in a stress or emergency situation the body  may well be unable to respond.</li>
<li>Smoking suppresses the immune  system. When combined with the circulatory effects already noted this  makes ear infections more likely and slower to clear up. People giving  up smoking have reported a huge improvement.</li>
<li>When we dive our  bodies undergo a physiological change called a mammalian diving reflex.  This is thought to put a greater strain on the heart and may well  explain why there are frequent diving heart attacks. Smokers already  have a much higher risk of heart attack than non-smokers. The  combination of mammalian diving reflex and smoking puts the heart under a  very high level of strain.</li>
</ol>
<h3>As you can see, smoking  doesn’t sit well with diving. And I haven’t even started talking about  the problems caused by platelet aggregation, increased blood viscosity  and elevated lactic acid levels — all typical in a smoker — yet.<br />
No  wonder that all dive training agencies warn about diving and smoking;  GUE goes so far as to specifically prohibit smokers taking their  training.</h3>
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