Fighting the Unseen: Life With Diabetes

Help us find a cure for Type 1 Diabetes. Every little bit counts and every single person matters!

Topic: Scuba Diving

Post Reply
Forum Home > Did You Know? > Scuba Diving

Marps
Site Owner
Posts: 55

Diving with diabetes--a condition that can cause dangerously low blood sugar--has been a hotly contested issue nearly as long as there have been recreational divers.

Here's a snapshot of the new rules:

»Dive fitness. "The criteria for diver fitness for people with diabetes isn't all that different from that for typical healthy divers," says Pollock. "The underwater environment doesn't have any special effects on glucose utilization and blood sugar levels. If your diabetes is well-managed during everyday activities on dry land, you're generally safe to dive."

Above all, that means you must be stable with your insulin regimen. You should wait three months after starting oral hypoglycemic agents (OHAs) and one year after starting insulin therapy before your first dive. You should also be free of any serious episodes (meaning you needed outside assistance) of hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia for one year before diving.

 

If you're prone to seizures, lack of coordination or impaired judgment when your blood sugar drops, you shouldn't dive. Nor should you dive if you don't know how exercise affects your blood sugar or if you can't sense when an episode of low blood sugar is coming on. Losing your faculties 40 feet below can have dire consequences.

Finally, certain diabetes-related health conditions can increase your risk for decompression sickness or other life-threatening complications. Don't dive if you have asthma, neuropathy (nerve damage), nephropathy (kidney disease), retinopathy (eye disease) or heart disease.

 

»Dive selection. "We still don't have all the information we would like on diving with diabetes under every circumstance," says Pollock. "For that reason, we want to be sure we avoid augmenting the risk by allowing divers to enter precarious situations."

It's a good idea to avoid cold, long, arduous dives that could send your blood sugar spiraling. Shallow diving is your best bet. Avoid anything deeper than 100 feet. "Once you get into the territory where nitrogen narcosis is a risk, it could be confused with hypoglycemia," says Pollock. You also want to avoid decompression dives, because if you have to come to the surface to address a bout of hypoglycemia, you don't want to have to prolong treatment for a decompression stop. Keep your dives to 60 minutes or less in duration, so you're not going unmonitored for an extended period of time. And stay away from wrecks and other overhead environments. The easier it is for you to surface relatively quickly if you need to, the better.

 

»Dive day management. You need to check your blood sugar before and after every dive to be sure it's in a safe range and not heading south. DAN recommends checking it 60 minutes, 30 minutes and 10 minutes before making a dive, and then once immediately after you get back in the boat or on shore. Your blood sugar should be at least 150 mg.dL (8.3 mmol.L). If it's less than that or if your blood sugar level falls between two of the measurements, you're not safe to take the plunge at that time. Also stay ashore if your blood sugar is too high (above 300 mg.dL or 16.7 mmol.L). Continue to check your blood sugar frequently 12 to 15 hours after diving.

 

Multiple dives aren't a problem, so long as you follow this same protocol for each dive and you stay stable and don't notice any downward trends. Researchers have had divers make up to four dives a day and found that in people with well-managed diabetes, blood glucose barely budged. That said, there's some evidence that people with diabetes are at increased risk for decompression sickness, so dive conservatively and limit your dives to shorter times than the maximum allowances on the dive tables or dive computer.

 

Staying Safe

 

Always carry rescue meds when you dive. Some diabetic divers swear by Insta-Glucose because its sturdy packaging stands up to salt water and changes in pressure. But cake frosting or other sources of oral glucose work, too. Just in case yours accidentally gets swept away by the sea, be sure your buddy carries a spare sugar source for you. DAN also strongly recommends divers with diabetes have parenteral glucagon available at the surface.

 

Be sure to educate your buddy. The sign for low blood sugar is an "L" with your thumb and index finger. If you feel a hypoglycemic episode coming on underwater, signal your buddy (and the dive leader, who can decide how to handle the rest of the group), and both you and your buddy should swim to the surface. Inflate your BC, take your glucose, and get out of the water. It's best if your buddy does not also have diabetes. Though the odds of both of you having an episode are low, it's wise not to take unnecessary risks.

Finally, take care of yourself. Staying out all night eating nachos and doing flaming shooters at the beachside bar is clearly a bad way to manage blood sugar.

 

Sleep well, eat well, stay hydrated, and absolutely, positively avoid hangovers. That's good advice for anyone.

 

Source: http://www.scubadiving.com/training/2006/12/diving-with-diabetes

--

Author of: Wretched (this is my sorry) ,  Okay , These Brief Moments and Test

www.FightingTheUnseen.com and www.KatherineMarple.com

August 7, 2009 at 2:11 PM Flag Quote & Reply

You must login to post.